Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars

Starspots are not well understood for contact binary star systems. The following properties of spots were systematically investigated: temperature, radius, colatitude, and longitude. Spots were modeled on an AE Phe like contact binary system. The spots were changed in a systematic manner. The light...

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Main Author: Hill, Robert L.
Other Authors: Kaitchuck, Ronald H.
Format: Others
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/176787
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1369918
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spelling ndltd-BSU-oai-cardinalscholar.bsu.edu-handle-1767872014-07-24T03:32:39ZComputational starspot photometry of contact binary starsHill, Robert L.Starspots -- Computer simulation.Eclipsing binaries -- Computer simulation.Astronomical photometry.Starspots are not well understood for contact binary star systems. The following properties of spots were systematically investigated: temperature, radius, colatitude, and longitude. Spots were modeled on an AE Phe like contact binary system. The spots were changed in a systematic manner. The light curve phases of primary minimum and primary maximum were affected by these parameter changes in a systematic manner, as well as the secondary minimum and maximum. It will be shown that it is possible to use the shift in these phases to study starspots over time. This information can also be used to identify the presence of spots in binary star systems.Starspots on contact binary systems are not commonly found at a longitude near 180°. The results of this study show that starspots near 180° should be the easiest to detect using photometric techniques. This is the most significant result from this study. Either there is an unknown physical reason why contact binary stars do not have starspots near a longitude of 180°, or the starspots are there and the photometric data has been misinterpreted.Department of Physics and AstronomyKaitchuck, Ronald H.2011-06-03T19:26:45Z2011-06-03T19:26:45Z20072007xxvi, 238 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm.LD2489.Z64 2007 .H55http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/176787http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1369918Virtual Press
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Starspots -- Computer simulation.
Eclipsing binaries -- Computer simulation.
Astronomical photometry.
spellingShingle Starspots -- Computer simulation.
Eclipsing binaries -- Computer simulation.
Astronomical photometry.
Hill, Robert L.
Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
description Starspots are not well understood for contact binary star systems. The following properties of spots were systematically investigated: temperature, radius, colatitude, and longitude. Spots were modeled on an AE Phe like contact binary system. The spots were changed in a systematic manner. The light curve phases of primary minimum and primary maximum were affected by these parameter changes in a systematic manner, as well as the secondary minimum and maximum. It will be shown that it is possible to use the shift in these phases to study starspots over time. This information can also be used to identify the presence of spots in binary star systems.Starspots on contact binary systems are not commonly found at a longitude near 180°. The results of this study show that starspots near 180° should be the easiest to detect using photometric techniques. This is the most significant result from this study. Either there is an unknown physical reason why contact binary stars do not have starspots near a longitude of 180°, or the starspots are there and the photometric data has been misinterpreted. === Department of Physics and Astronomy
author2 Kaitchuck, Ronald H.
author_facet Kaitchuck, Ronald H.
Hill, Robert L.
author Hill, Robert L.
author_sort Hill, Robert L.
title Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
title_short Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
title_full Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
title_fullStr Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
title_full_unstemmed Computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
title_sort computational starspot photometry of contact binary stars
publishDate 2011
url http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/176787
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1369918
work_keys_str_mv AT hillrobertl computationalstarspotphotometryofcontactbinarystars
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