Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?

A re-examination of high-resolution spectral monitoring of the W UMa–type binaries AW UMa and ϵ CrA casts doubt on the widely utilized L. B. Lucy model of contact binaries. The detection of the very faint profile of the secondary component in AW UMa leads to a new spectroscopic determination of the...

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Main Author: Slavek M. Rucinski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:The Astronomical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad9f26
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author Slavek M. Rucinski
author_facet Slavek M. Rucinski
author_sort Slavek M. Rucinski
collection DOAJ
description A re-examination of high-resolution spectral monitoring of the W UMa–type binaries AW UMa and ϵ CrA casts doubt on the widely utilized L. B. Lucy model of contact binaries. The detection of the very faint profile of the secondary component in AW UMa leads to a new spectroscopic determination of the mass ratio, q _sp  = 0.092 ± 0.007, which is close to the previous, medium-resolution spectroscopic result of T. Pribulla & S. M. Rucinski, q _sp  = 0.101 ± 0.006, and remains substantially different from a cluster of generally accepted photometric results by several authors, concentrated around q _ph  = 0.080 ± 0.005. A survey of binaries with the best-determined values of the mass ratio shows a common tendency for q _ph  <  q _sp . The tendency for systematically smaller values of q _ph may result from the overfilling of the primary lobe and underfilling of the secondary lobe relative to the Roche model geometry, as predicted by the K. Stȩpień model. Despite the observed moderate inter-systemic velocities, the photometric Lucy model may remain useful in providing approximate, though biased, results for the mass ratio. A complicating factor in detailed spectral analysis may be the occurrence of Enhanced Spectral-line Perturbations (ESPs) projected over the secondary profiles, appearing in different numbers in the two studied binaries. The ESPs are tentatively identified within the Stȩpień model as collision fronts or fountains of primary-component gas from the circumbinary, energy-carrying flow.
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spelling doaj-art-cd64a26e4be547ed974508c2c2a24f392025-01-20T14:24:29ZengIOP PublishingThe Astronomical Journal1538-38812025-01-0116928210.3847/1538-3881/ad9f26Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?Slavek M. Rucinski0Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Toronto, 50 St. George St., Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3H4, CanadaA re-examination of high-resolution spectral monitoring of the W UMa–type binaries AW UMa and ϵ CrA casts doubt on the widely utilized L. B. Lucy model of contact binaries. The detection of the very faint profile of the secondary component in AW UMa leads to a new spectroscopic determination of the mass ratio, q _sp  = 0.092 ± 0.007, which is close to the previous, medium-resolution spectroscopic result of T. Pribulla & S. M. Rucinski, q _sp  = 0.101 ± 0.006, and remains substantially different from a cluster of generally accepted photometric results by several authors, concentrated around q _ph  = 0.080 ± 0.005. A survey of binaries with the best-determined values of the mass ratio shows a common tendency for q _ph  <  q _sp . The tendency for systematically smaller values of q _ph may result from the overfilling of the primary lobe and underfilling of the secondary lobe relative to the Roche model geometry, as predicted by the K. Stȩpień model. Despite the observed moderate inter-systemic velocities, the photometric Lucy model may remain useful in providing approximate, though biased, results for the mass ratio. A complicating factor in detailed spectral analysis may be the occurrence of Enhanced Spectral-line Perturbations (ESPs) projected over the secondary profiles, appearing in different numbers in the two studied binaries. The ESPs are tentatively identified within the Stȩpień model as collision fronts or fountains of primary-component gas from the circumbinary, energy-carrying flow.https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad9f26Contact binary stars
spellingShingle Slavek M. Rucinski
Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
The Astronomical Journal
Contact binary stars
title Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
title_full Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
title_fullStr Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
title_full_unstemmed Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
title_short Lessons from the High-resolution Spectroscopy of AW UMa and ϵ CrA: Is the Lucy Model Valid?
title_sort lessons from the high resolution spectroscopy of aw uma and ϵ cra is the lucy model valid
topic Contact binary stars
url https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad9f26
work_keys_str_mv AT slavekmrucinski lessonsfromthehighresolutionspectroscopyofawumaandecraisthelucymodelvalid