Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data

NY Virginis is an eclipsing binary system with a subdwarf B primary and an M type dwarf secondary. Recent studies (Qian et al. 2012; Lee et al. 2014) suggested the presence of two circumbinary planets with a few Jovian masses within the system. Lee et al. (2014) examined the orbital stabilities of t...

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Main Authors: Baştürk Özgür, Esmer Ekrem Murat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-02-01
Series:Open Astronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/astro-2018-0009
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spelling doaj-12f6a14211cc4ff8bb3dadf2673df2062021-09-06T19:40:14ZengDe GruyterOpen Astronomy2543-63762018-02-01271141810.1515/astro-2018-0009astro-2018-0009Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New DataBaştürk Özgür0Esmer Ekrem Murat1Department of Astronomy and Space Sciences, Faculty of Science, Ankara University, Ankara, TurkeyDepartment of Astronomy and Space Sciences, Faculty of Science, Ankara University, Ankara, TurkeyNY Virginis is an eclipsing binary system with a subdwarf B primary and an M type dwarf secondary. Recent studies (Qian et al. 2012; Lee et al. 2014) suggested the presence of two circumbinary planets with a few Jovian masses within the system. Lee et al. (2014) examined the orbital stabilities of the suggested planets, using the best-fit parameters derived from their eclipse timing variation analysis. They found that the outer companion should be ejected from the system in about 800 000 years. An observational report from Pulley et al. (2016) pointed out that the recent mideclipse times of the binary deviate significantly from the models suggested by Lee et al. (2014). In fact, variations in the orbital period of the system had already been recognized by many authors, but the parameters of these variations vary significantly as new data accumulate. Here, we analyze the eclipse timing variations of the NY Vir system, using new mid-eclipse times that we have obtained together with earlier published measurements in order to understand the nature of the system and constrain its parameters.https://doi.org/10.1515/astro-2018-0009stars: subdwarfseclipsing binarieso-c variationsplanets: circumbinary planetsny vir
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Baştürk Özgür
Esmer Ekrem Murat
spellingShingle Baştürk Özgür
Esmer Ekrem Murat
Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
Open Astronomy
stars: subdwarfs
eclipsing binaries
o-c variations
planets: circumbinary planets
ny vir
author_facet Baştürk Özgür
Esmer Ekrem Murat
author_sort Baştürk Özgür
title Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
title_short Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
title_full Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
title_fullStr Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
title_full_unstemmed Orbital Period Variations in the NY Vir System, Revisited in the Light of New Data
title_sort orbital period variations in the ny vir system, revisited in the light of new data
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Astronomy
issn 2543-6376
publishDate 2018-02-01
description NY Virginis is an eclipsing binary system with a subdwarf B primary and an M type dwarf secondary. Recent studies (Qian et al. 2012; Lee et al. 2014) suggested the presence of two circumbinary planets with a few Jovian masses within the system. Lee et al. (2014) examined the orbital stabilities of the suggested planets, using the best-fit parameters derived from their eclipse timing variation analysis. They found that the outer companion should be ejected from the system in about 800 000 years. An observational report from Pulley et al. (2016) pointed out that the recent mideclipse times of the binary deviate significantly from the models suggested by Lee et al. (2014). In fact, variations in the orbital period of the system had already been recognized by many authors, but the parameters of these variations vary significantly as new data accumulate. Here, we analyze the eclipse timing variations of the NY Vir system, using new mid-eclipse times that we have obtained together with earlier published measurements in order to understand the nature of the system and constrain its parameters.
topic stars: subdwarfs
eclipsing binaries
o-c variations
planets: circumbinary planets
ny vir
url https://doi.org/10.1515/astro-2018-0009
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