V486 Car is a near-contact binary with component masses 2.1 and 0.4 solar masses, radii 3.2 and 1.48 solar radii, temperatures 10000 K and 6200 K, plus evidence for a ~0.3 solar mass companion at a few AU.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
fields
astro-ph.SR 4years
2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
Spectral disentangling of ET Cru yields masses of 13.41 and 6.00 solar masses with 1.3% precision and shows the secondary has severe CNO-cycle chemical anomalies exceeding typical Algol systems.
Tertiary in EM Boo is A-F type with Teff=7000K; system distance ~300 pc indicates Gaia DR3 underestimates true distance due to multiplicity.
Empirical zero-point constants for Gaia bolometric corrections are derived as weighted averages 0.8677, 1.0449, and 2.0510 mag for G, GBP, and GRP from 88 stars, yielding corresponding magnitude zero-points via IAU definitions.
citing papers explorer
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The Close Binary V486 Carinae
V486 Car is a near-contact binary with component masses 2.1 and 0.4 solar masses, radii 3.2 and 1.48 solar radii, temperatures 10000 K and 6200 K, plus evidence for a ~0.3 solar mass companion at a few AU.
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Spectral Disentangling Reveals Deep CNO-cycle Exposure in ET Cru
Spectral disentangling of ET Cru yields masses of 13.41 and 6.00 solar masses with 1.3% precision and shows the secondary has severe CNO-cycle chemical anomalies exceeding typical Algol systems.
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Spectroscopic Disentangling Revealed the Tertiary Component in the Multiple System EM Boo
Tertiary in EM Boo is A-F type with Teff=7000K; system distance ~300 pc indicates Gaia DR3 underestimates true distance due to multiplicity.
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Spectroscopic Bolometric Corrections and Empirical Zero-point Constants of \textit{Gaia} Magnitudes, $G$, $G_{\rm BP}$, and $G_{\rm RP}$, from \textit{Gaia} XP Spectra
Empirical zero-point constants for Gaia bolometric corrections are derived as weighted averages 0.8677, 1.0449, and 2.0510 mag for G, GBP, and GRP from 88 stars, yielding corresponding magnitude zero-points via IAU definitions.