4.7 Article

THE ARAUCARIA PROJECT: THE FIRST-OVERTONE CLASSICAL CEPHEID IN THE ECLIPSING SYSTEM OGLE-LMC-CEP-2532

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 806, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/806/1/29

Keywords

binaries: eclipsing; galaxies: individual (LMC); stars: oscillations; stars: variables: Cepheids

Funding

  1. Polish National Science Center [MAESTRO 2012/06/A/ST9/00269]
  2. BASAL Centro de Astrofisica y Tecnologias Afines (CATA) [PFB-06/2007]
  3. Polish National Science Centre [DEC-2011/03/B/ST9/02573]
  4. Chilean Ministry of Economy, Development and Tourism's Millenium Science Initiative [IC120009]
  5. FONDECYT [3130361]
  6. Polish NSC [UMO-2011/01/M/ST9/05914]
  7. US Department of Energy through the University of California, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [W-7405-Eng-48]
  8. National Science Foundation through the Center for Particle Astrophysics of the University of California [AST-8809616]
  9. Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatory, part of the Australian National University

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We present here the first spectroscopic and photometric analysis of the double-lined eclipsing binary containing the classical, first-overtone (FO) Cepheid OGLE-LMC-CEP-2532 (MACHO 81.8997.87). The system has an orbital period of 800 days and the Cepheid is pulsating with a period of 2.035 days. Using spectroscopic data from three high-class telescopes and photometry from three surveys spanning 7500 days, we are able to derive the dynamical masses for both stars with an accuracy better than 3%. This makes the Cepheid in this system one of a few classical Cepheids with an accurate dynamical mass determination (M-1 = 3.90 +/- 0.10 M-circle dot). The companion is probably slightly less massive (3.82 +/- 0.10 M-circle dot), but may have the same mass within errors (M-2/M-1 = 0.981 +/- 0.015). The system has an age of about 185 million years and the Cepheid is in a more advanced evolutionary stage. For the first time precise parameters are derived for both stars in this system. Due to the lack of the secondary eclipse for many years, not much was known about the Cepheid's companion. In our analysis, we used extra information from the pulsations and the orbital solution from the radial velocity curve. The best model predicts a grazing secondary eclipse shallower than 1 mmag, hence undetectable in the data, about 370 days after the primary eclipse. The dynamical mass obtained here is the most accurate known for a FO Cepheid and will contribute to the solution of the Cepheid mass discrepancy problem.

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