English

Establishing Alpha Oph as a Prototype Rotator: Improved Astrometric Orbit

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2015-05-20 v1 Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics

Abstract

The nearby star Alpha Oph (Ras Alhague) is a rapidly rotating A5IV star spinning at ~89% of its breakup velocity. This system has been imaged extensively by interferometric techniques, giving a precise geometric model of the star's oblateness and the resulting temperature variation on the stellar surface. Fortuitously, Alpha Oph has a previously known stellar companion, and characterization of the orbit provides an independent, dynamically-based check of both the host star and the companion mass. Such measurements are crucial to constrain models of such rapidly rotating stars. In this study, we combine eight years of Adaptive Optics imaging data from the Palomar, AEOS, and CFHT telescopes to derive an improved, astrometric characterization of the companion orbit. We also use photometry from these observations to derive a model-based estimate of the companion mass. A fit was performed on the photocenter motion of this system to extract a component mass ratio. We find masses of 2.40^{0.23}_{0.37} solar masses and 0.85^{0.06}_{0.04} solar masses for Alpha Oph A and Alpha Oph B, respectively. Previous orbital studies of this system found a mass too high for this system, inconsistent with stellar evolutionary calculations. Our measurements of the host star mass are more consistent with these evolutionary calculations, but with slightly higher uncertainties. In addition to the dynamically-derived masses, we use IJHK photometry to derive a model-based mass for Alpha Oph B, of 0.77 +/- 0.05 solar masses marginally consistent with the dynamical masses derived from our orbit. Our model fits predict a periastron passage on 2012 April 19, with the two components having a ~50 milliarcsec separation from March to May 2012. A modest amount of interferometric and radial velocity data during this period could provide a mass determination of this star at the few percent level.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1010.4028,
  title  = {Establishing Alpha Oph as a Prototype Rotator: Improved Astrometric Orbit},
  author = {Sasha Hinkley and John D. Monnier and Ben R. Oppenheimer and Lewis C Roberts and Michael Ireland and Neil Zimmerman and Douglas Brenner and Ian R. Parry and Frantz Martinache and Olivier Lai and Remi Soummer and Anand Sivaramakrishnan and Charles Beichman and Lynne Hillenbrand and Ming Zhao and James P. Lloyd and David Bernat and Gautam Vasisht and Justin R. Crepp and Laurent Pueyo and Michael Shao and Marshall D. Perrin and David L. King and Antonin Bouchez and Jennifer E. Roberts and Richard Dekany and Rick Burruss},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1010.4028},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Accepted to ApJ, 6 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T16:31:06.478Z