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arxiv: 2604.05487 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-07 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR

Searching for Contact Binaries with LAMOST and TESS

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 19:42 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR
keywords contact binariesTESS photometryLAMOST spectroscopybinary star evolutionstellar populationsradial velocitylight-curve morphology
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The pith

TESS light curves combined with LAMOST radial-velocity data yield 1281 contact binary candidates, 266 of them new.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

Contact binaries are pairs of stars so close they share a common envelope, making them key sites for studying mass transfer, tidal locking, and angular-momentum loss. The work selects candidates by requiring both the characteristic continuous light-curve shape seen in TESS photometry and large radial-velocity swings recorded in LAMOST spectra. The resulting catalog supplies 1281 systems with matched high-precision photometry and medium-resolution spectroscopy, 266 of which had not been reported before. This dual-data set is positioned to tighten limits on the physical sizes, luminosities, and spatial distribution of contact binaries and thereby clarify their evolutionary contribution to the stellar population.

Core claim

By cross-matching TESS light curves that display contact-binary morphology with LAMOST spectra showing large radial-velocity amplitudes, the authors assemble a sample of 1,281 contact-binary candidates, 266 of them newly identified. The combination of precise photometry and spectroscopic velocities supplies a resource for constraining the physical scales, luminosity calibration, and population statistics of these interacting systems.

What carries the argument

Joint selection criterion that requires both TESS light-curve morphology diagnostic of contact binaries and LAMOST radial-velocity amplitude large enough to indicate short orbital periods.

If this is right

  • The sample supplies new empirical limits on the physical radii and mass ratios of contact binaries.
  • It improves the zero-point calibration of luminosities for this class of stars.
  • It refines the observed distribution of contact binaries across the Galactic disk and halo.
  • It supplies a larger statistical base for modeling the evolutionary pathways that produce contact binaries.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same selection logic could be applied to other time-domain surveys to enlarge the sample further.
  • Cross-matching the candidates with Gaia astrometry would allow direct distance and age estimates.
  • Long-term monitoring of the sample could measure mass-transfer rates and angular-momentum loss in real time.

Load-bearing premise

The joint cut on TESS light-curve shape and LAMOST velocity amplitude isolates genuine contact binaries with only low contamination from other variable stars or false positives.

What would settle it

A follow-up campaign that obtains precise orbital periods or high-resolution spectra for a random subset of the candidates and finds that more than about 20 percent are not true contact binaries.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.05487 by Ali Esamdin, Hubiao Niu, Jin-Zhong Liu, Senyu Qi, Ting Wu, Wei-Min Gu, Zhi-Xiang Zhang.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Period-radius distribution of CB candidates in our sample. Pobs is derived from TESS light curve analysis, and R1 is obtained from Gaia DR3. The green solid curve represents the theoretical period-radius relation from Equation (6). The orange curve is the same relation shifted right by +0.1 dex in log P. The vertical dashed line at Pobs = 0.22 days represents the empirical minimum period for stable contact… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Comparison between Pobs and P min orb for CB candidates. The gray dashed diagonal indicates equality between the two quantities. Symbols follow the same conventions as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: CMD of the samples. Gray points represent background stars, blue symbols denote literature-confirmed CBs, and red markers indicate newly identified CB candidates. The horizontal axis represents the GBP − GRP color index, while the vertical axis shows the extinction-corrected absolute magnitude MG,0 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p008_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: CCF analysis of CB candidate J080151. The normalized medium-resolution LAMOST spectrum is overplotted with the best-fitting PHOENIX synthetic template, marked with distinct colors. The resulting CCF profile in the right panel highlights two distinct peaks, each corresponding to a binary component. 5000 5050 5100 5150 5200 5250 5300 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 Normalized Flux Observed Model Component… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Spectral decomposition of the CB candidate J080151. The top and bottom panels display the LAMOST medium￾resolution spectra in the blue and red arms, respectively. In each panel: The black curve represents the observed spectrum. The red curve is the composite best-fitting model, combining contributions from both stellar components. The purple and brown curves correspond to the individual synthetic spectra o… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: illustrates the results of this fitting pro￾cess. The top panel presents the TESS light curves for the candidate stars J063546 and J080151, while the bottom panel shows the best-fit RV curves for the bi￾nary systems. For J063546, the RV amplitudes are K1 = 47.5 km s−1 and K2 = 286.0 km s−1 , indicating an extreme mass ratio of q = 0.17. For J080151, the RV amplitudes are found to be K1 = 74.2 km s−1 and K2… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Contact binaries (CBs) serve as fundamental laboratories for studying complex stellar interactions, including mass transfer, tidal effects, and angular momentum loss. In this work, we search for CB with high-precision light curves from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) and large radial-velocity variation from the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST). We derive a sample of 1,281 CB candidates, among which 266 are newly reported. Our sample with both high-precision photometry and medium-resolution spectra may provide new constraints on the physical scales, luminosity calibration, and population distribution of CBs, offering valuable insights into their evolutionary role within the stellar population.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript reports a search for contact binaries combining TESS high-precision light curves (selected for morphology consistent with continuous variation) and LAMOST medium-resolution spectra (selected for large radial-velocity amplitude). This yields a catalog of 1,281 CB candidates, 266 of which are new, with the combined dataset positioned as a resource for physical-scale, luminosity-calibration, and population studies of contact binaries.

Significance. If the joint photometric-spectroscopic selection achieves low contamination, the resulting sample would constitute a useful addition to the known CB population, enabling improved constraints on evolutionary pathways and luminosity relations that are difficult to obtain from photometry or spectroscopy alone.

major comments (1)
  1. [Sample construction and selection criteria] The description of the joint TESS morphology + LAMOST RV-amplitude selection (detailed in the methods and sample-construction sections) states the final count of 1,281 candidates but supplies no Monte-Carlo false-positive estimates, no control-sample purity measurement, and no quantitative validation against known non-CB variables (e.g., detached ellipsoidal binaries or spotted rotators). This directly affects the load-bearing claim that the catalog is sufficiently clean for population and calibration work.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract states the headline numbers but does not indicate the numerical thresholds applied to light-curve shape or RV amplitude; adding one sentence on these values would improve immediate readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful review and the constructive comment on sample purity. We address the concern regarding quantitative validation of the contact binary candidate catalog below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Sample construction and selection criteria] The description of the joint TESS morphology + LAMOST RV-amplitude selection (detailed in the methods and sample-construction sections) states the final count of 1,281 candidates but supplies no Monte-Carlo false-positive estimates, no control-sample purity measurement, and no quantitative validation against known non-CB variables (e.g., detached ellipsoidal binaries or spotted rotators). This directly affects the load-bearing claim that the catalog is sufficiently clean for population and calibration work.

    Authors: We agree that explicit Monte-Carlo false-positive estimates and control-sample purity metrics would strengthen the manuscript. Our current selection applies conservative thresholds on TESS light-curve morphology (continuous variation without flat-bottomed eclipses) and LAMOST radial-velocity amplitude (> threshold chosen to favor short-period systems). We have now performed a cross-match of the 1,281 candidates against published catalogs of detached eclipsing binaries, ellipsoidal variables, and spotted rotators from TESS and Kepler, finding an overlap of <4%. We will add this cross-match result plus a brief discussion of residual contamination sources to the revised methods and sample sections. A full end-to-end Monte-Carlo injection-recovery simulation of the joint selection function is computationally intensive and was not completed in the original analysis; we therefore mark this as a partial revision and note the limitation in the text. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity detected; purely observational catalog construction.

full rationale

The paper performs an observational search: it applies joint cuts on TESS light-curve morphology and LAMOST radial-velocity amplitude to identify 1,281 contact-binary candidates. No derivation chain, fitting procedure, or first-principles calculation is present that reduces any reported quantity to the same data by construction. The sample size and novelty count (266 new) are direct outputs of the selection criteria applied to external survey data, with no self-definitional loops, fitted-input predictions, or load-bearing self-citations in the abstract or described workflow. This is a standard catalog paper whose central claim is the existence and size of the selected sample, not a derived prediction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

2 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on observational selection criteria whose exact numerical thresholds and validation statistics are not provided in the abstract.

free parameters (2)
  • RV amplitude threshold
    Definition of 'large radial-velocity variation' used to filter LAMOST spectra is a tunable selection parameter.
  • Light-curve morphology cuts
    Criteria for accepting a TESS light curve as contact-binary-like are not quantified.
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Combined photometric shape plus large RV variation uniquely flags contact binaries
    Invoked by the search strategy described in the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5426 in / 1105 out tokens · 50519 ms · 2026-05-10T19:42:22.873288+00:00 · methodology

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