4.6 Article

Photometry of β Lyrae in 2018 by the BRITE Satellites

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 158, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ab3b55

Keywords

binaries: close; binaries: eclipsing; stars: individual (beta Lyr); techniques: photometric

Funding

  1. Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG)
  2. University of Vienna
  3. Technical University of Graz
  4. University of Innsbruck
  5. Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
  6. University of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (UTIAS)
  7. Foundation for Polish Science & Technology (FNiTP MNiSW)
  8. Polish National Science Centre (NCN)
  9. SPUB grant from the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education (MNiSW)
  10. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada
  11. National Science Centre (NCN) [2016/21/B/ST9/01126]
  12. Austrian Space Application Programme (ASAP) of the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG)
  13. [BK/200/RAU1/2018 t.3]

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Observations of beta Lyr in four months of 2018 by three BRIght Target Explorer (BRITE) Constellation satellites, the red-filter BRITE-Toronto and BRITE-Heweliusz, and the blue-filter BRITE-Lem, permitted a first, limited look into the light-curve variability in two spectral bands. The variations were found to be well correlated outside the innermost phases of the primary eclipses with the blue variations appearing to have smaller amplitudes than the red; this reduction may reflect their presumed origin in the cooler, outer parts of the accretion disk. This result must be confirmed with more extensive material as the current conclusions are based on observations spanning slightly less than three orbital cycles of the binary. The assumption of an instrumental problem and the applied corrections made to explain the unexpectedly large amplitude of the red-filter light curve observed with the BRITE-Toronto satellite in 2016 are fully confirmed by the 2018 results.

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