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A&A 437, 641-656 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20041995
Line profile variability from tidal interactions in binary systems
E. Moreno1, G. Koenigsberger2 and O. Toledano21 Instituto de Astronomía, Apdo. Postal 70-264, D.F. 04510, Mexico
e-mail: edmundo@astroscu.unam.mx
2 Centro de Ciencias Físicas, UNAM, Apdo. Postal 48-3, Cuernavaca, Mor. 62251, Mexico
e-mail: gloria@ce.fis.unam.mx
(Received 11 September 2004 / Accepted 5 March 2005)
Abstract
We present the results of ab initio calculations of the
photospheric line-profile variability produced by the tidal
deformations in binary systems. We use the one-layer approximation
to compute the effects produced on a primary star's equatorial region
by its companion in the general case of arbitrary rotational
velocity (
), eccentricity and viscosity,
. For an eccentric
binary such as
Per, the computed absorption lines display
bumps that are superposed on the rotationally broadened profile and
that travel from the blue side of the line towards the red, qualitatively
similar to the observations. The strength and multiplicity of the bumps
depend on orbital phase. In the case of binaries with circular orbits,
non-synchronous rotation leads to strong profile variability which can
be described in terms of inverted "S"-shape patterns in grey-scale representations
of the variability. The radial velocity curves obtained by measuring the centroid
of the varying line-profiles are distorted with respect to the true radial velocity
curves. This effect may introduce significant uncertainties in the mass determination
of unseen companions. The line-profile variability is produced almost entirely by the azimuthal
component of the velocity perturbations,
. We put forth
the hypothesis that the differentially-rotating external layers that develop
in non-synchronous binary systems may lead to the generation of magnetic activity
near the stellar surface. The possibility of constraining the values of
near the
stellar surface through the use of line-profile variability is also suggested.
Key words: stars: binaries: spectroscopic -- stars: pulsation -- stars: individual:
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2005
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