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Creators/Authors contains: "Flores, Becky"

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  1. Abstract We present a study of the double-lined spectroscopic binary HD 21278 that contains one of the brightest main-sequence stars in the youngαPersei open cluster. We analyzed new spectra and reanalyzed archived spectra to measure precise new radial velocity curves for the binary. We also obtained interferometric data using the CHARA Array at Mount Wilson to measure the sky positions of the two stars and the inclination of the ∼2 mas orbit. We determine that the two stars have masses of 5.381 ± 0.084Mand 3.353 ± 0.064M. From isochrone fits, we find the cluster’s age to be 49  ±  7 Myr (using PARSEC models) or 49.5 ± 6 Myr (MIST models). Finally, we revisit the massive white dwarfs that are candidate escapees from theαPersei cluster to try to better characterize the massive end of the white dwarf initial–final mass relation. The implied progenitor masses challenge the idea that Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarfs are made by single stars with masses near 8M
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 17, 2026
  2. Sallum, Stephanie; Sanchez-Bermudez, Joel; Kammerer, Jens (Ed.)
  3. Mérand, Antoine; Sallum, Stephanie; Sanchez-Bermudez, Joel (Ed.)
    The Michigan Young STar Imager at CHARA (MYSTIC) is a K-band interferometric beam combining instrument funded by the United States National Science Foundation, designed primarily for imaging sub-au scale disk structures around nearby young stars and to probe the planet formation process. Installed at the CHARA array in July 2021, with baselines up to 331 meters, MYSTIC provides a maximum angular resolution of λ/2B ∼ 0.7 mas. The instrument injects phase corrected light from the array into inexpensive, single-mode, polarization maintaining silica fibers, which are then passed via a vacuum feedthrough into a cryogenic dewar operating at 220 K for imaging. MYSTIC utilizes a high frame rate, ultra-low read noise SAPHIRA detector, and implements two beam combiners: a 6-telescope image plane beam combiner, based on the MIRC-X design, for targets as faint as 7.7 Kmag, as well as a 4-telescope integrated optic beam-combiner mode using a spare chip leftover from the GRAVITY instrument. MYSTIC is co-phased with the MIRC-X (J+H band) instrument for simultaneous fringe-tracking and imaging, and shares its software suite with the latter to allow a single observer to operate both instruments. Herein, we present the instrument design, review its operational performance, present early commissioning science observations, and propose upgrades to the instrument that could improve its K-band sensitivity to 10th magnitude in the near future. 
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