A 2+1+1 quadruple star system containing the most eccentric, low-mass, short-period, eclipsing binary known

Publisher Version
10.1093/mnras/stab3507Author(s)
Han, E.
Rappaport, S.A.
Vanderburg, A.
Tofflemire, B.M.
Borkovits, T.
Schwengeler, H.M.
Zasche, P.
Krolikowski, D.M.
Muirhead, Philip S.
Kristiansen, M.H.
Terentev, I.A.
Omohundro, M.
Gagliano, R.
Jacobs, T.
LaCourse, D.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/43522Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation (published version)
E. Han, S.A. Rappaport, A. Vanderburg, B.M. Tofflemire, T. Borkovits, H.M. Schwengeler, P. Zasche, D.M. Krolikowski, P.S. Muirhead, M.H. Kristiansen, I.A. Terentev, M. Omohundro, R. Gagliano, T. Jacobs, D. LaCourse. "A 2+1+1 quadruple star system containing the most eccentric, low-mass, short-period, eclipsing binary known." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab3507Abstract
We present an analysis of a newly discovered 2+1+1 quadruple system with TESS containing an unresolved eclipsing binary (EB) as part of TIC 121088960 and a close neighbor TIC 121088959. The EB consists of two very low-mass M dwarfs in a highly-eccentric (e = 0.709) short-period (P = 3.04358 d) orbit. Given the large pixel size of TESS and the small separation (3${^{\prime\prime}_{.}}$9) between TIC 121088959 and TIC 121088960 we used light centroid analysis of the difference image between in-eclipse and out-of-eclipse data to show that the EB likely resides in TIC 121088960, but contributes only ∼10% of its light. Radial velocity data were acquired with iSHELL at NASA’s Infrared Facility and the Coudé spectrograph at the McDonald 2.7-m telescope. For both images, the measured RVs showed no variation over the 11-day observational baseline, and the RV difference between the two images was 8 ± 0.3 km s−1. The similar distances and proper motions of the two images indicate that TIC 121088959 and TIC 121088960 are a gravitationally bound pair. Gaia’s large RUWE and astrometric_excess_noise parameters for TIC 121088960, further indicate that this image is the likely host of the unresolved EB and is itself a triple star. We carried out an SED analysis and calculated stellar masses for the four stars, all of which are in the M dwarf regime: 0.19 M⊙ and 0.14 M⊙ for the EB stars and 0.43 M⊙ and 0.39 M⊙ for the brighter visible stars, respectively. Lastly, numerical simulations show that the orbital period of the inner triple is likely the range 1 to 50 years.
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© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.Collections
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