ι Cassiopeiae: Orbit, Masses, and Photometry from Adaptive Optics Imaging in the I and H Bands
Abstract
The multiple-star system ι Cas was observed as a calibration for our adaptive optics observations in 2001 July with the Advanced Electro-Optical System (AEOS) 3.63 m telescope in Maui, Hawaii, and the first ever image of the faint astrometric component Aa (along with A and B) was obtained at the H-band wavelength. Another image was obtained in 2002 February with the same telescope, but that time in the I band. This wider image includes the C component and is the first to show four components. By combining our images with seven recent speckle interferometry measurements, a 47 yr period relative orbit is derived for the A-Aa components. Comparing the motion of B with respect to the A-Aa system, previous A-B orbits are rejected in favor of simple rectilinear motion of B across the field. Nevertheless, the history of the relative vector separation between B and A reveals the suborbital motion of A around its center of gravity with Aa, leading to a true orbit for A. The masses of A and Aa are thus determined to be 1.99+/-0.28 and 0.69+/-0.12 Msolar, respectively. Combining our differential photometry in the I and H bands with B and V information from the Tycho-2 catalog, we derive spectral types for all four from their colors: component A is spectral type A3 with peculiar red colors, Aa is G6, B is F5, and C is K3.
Based on observations made at the Maui Space Surveillance System operated by Detachment 15 of the US Air Force Research Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate.- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- March 2003
- DOI:
- 10.1086/346224
- Bibcode:
- 2003ApJ...585.1007D
- Keywords:
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- Stars: Binaries: Visual;
- Instrumentation: Adaptive Optics;
- Stars: Fundamental Parameters;
- Stars: Individual: Constellation Name: ι Cassiopeiae;
- Techniques: High Anular Resolution