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1994PASP..106..921W - Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 106, 921-941 (1994/September-0)

Binary-star light-curve models.

WILSON R.E.

Abstract (from CDS):

The historical development of binary star light curve models is traced from the early 1900s to the present, with emphasis on recent progress. A major break with tradition occurred about 1970 when physical models, based on equipotentials and made possible by fast computers, replaced geometrical models. Physical models have been improving in accuracy, efficiency, generality, and user-friendliness. Further improvements can be expected. Astrophysical advances due to the new models range from new ways to estimate mass ratios and rotation rates to confirmation of theoretical predictions abou the structure of W UMa stars and behavior of irridated convective envelopes. The morphology of close binaries, including extensions to non-synchronous rotation and orbital eccentricity, is interwoven with physical models and their applications. The origins and influence of the four morphological types –detached, and semi-detached, overcontact, and double contact–are inseparable from the development of light curve models. Parameter adjustment is an active area, with contributions on Differential Corrections, the Marquardt algorithm, the Simplex algorithm, and other methods for reaching a least squares minimum. Solutions with applied constraints and simultaneous solutions of two or more kinds of observations are coming into more frequent usage. Observables other than photometric brightness include radial velocity, polarization, photospheric spectral line profiles, and spectral distributions due to circumstellar flows. Some of the newer models extend onto these areas and are leading to new kinds of observing programs.

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