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Creators/Authors contains: "Kochanek, C S"

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  1. Heartbeat stars are a subclass of binary stars with short periods, high eccentricities, and phase-folded light curves that resemble an electrocardiogram. We start from the 𝐺𝑎𝑖𝑎 catalogs of spectroscopic binaries and use 𝑇𝐸𝑆𝑆 photometry to identify 112 new heartbeat star systems. We fit their phase-folded light curves with an analytic model to measure their orbital periods, eccentricities, inclinations, and arguments of periastron. We then compare these orbital parameters to the 𝐺𝑎𝑖𝑎 spectroscopic orbital solution. Our periods and eccentricities are consistent with the 𝐺𝑎𝑖𝑎 solutions for 85 % of the single-line spectroscopic binaries but only 20 % of the double-line spectroscopic binaries. For the two double-line spectroscopic binary heartbeat stars with consistent orbits, we combine the 𝑇𝐸𝑆𝑆 phase-folded light curve and the 𝐺𝑎𝑖𝑎 velocity semi-amplitudes to measure the stellar masses and radii with 𝙿𝙷𝙾𝙴𝙱𝙴 . In a statistical analysis of the HB population, we find that non-giant heartbeat stars have evolved off the main sequence and that their fractional abundance rises rapidly with effective temperature. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
  2. We present optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the peculiar Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) ASASSN-20jq/SN 2020qxp. It is a low-luminosity object, with a peak absolute magnitude ofMB = −17.1 ± 0.5 mag, while its post-peak light-curve decline rate of Δm15(B) = 1.35 ± 0.09 mag and color-stretch parameter ofsBV ⪆ 0.82 is similar to that of normal luminosity SNe Ia. That makes it a prevalent outlier in both the SN Ia luminosity-width and the luminosity-color-stretch relations. The analysis of the early light curves indicates a possible “bump” during the first ≈1.4 days of explosion. ASASSN-20jq synthesized a low radioactive56Ni mass of 0.09 ± 0.01 M. The near-maximum light spectra of the supernova show strong Si IIabsorption lines, indicating a cooler photosphere than normal SNe Ia; however, it lacks Ti IIabsorption lines. Additionally, it shows unusually strong absorption features of O Iλ7773 and the Ca IInear-infrared triplet. The nebular spectra of ASASSN-20jq show a remarkably strong but narrow forbidden [Ca II]λλ7291, 7324 doublet emission that has not been seen in SNe Ia except for a handful of Type Iax events. There is also a marginal detection of the [O I]λλ6300, 6364 doublet emission in nebular spectra, which is extremely rare. Both the [Ca II] and [O I] lines are redshifted by roughly 2000 km s−1. ASASSN-20jq also exhibits a strong [Fe II]λ7155 emission line with a tilted-top line profile, which is identical to the [Fe II]λ16433 line profile. The asymmetric [Fe II] line profiles, along with the redshifted [Ca II] and emission lines, suggest a high central density white dwarf progenitor that underwent an off-center delayed-detonation explosion mechanism, synthesizing roughly equal amounts of56Ni during the deflagration and detonation burning phases. The equal production of56Ni in both burning phases distinguishes ASASSN-20jq from normal bright and subluminous SNe Ia. Assuming this scenario, we simultaneously modeled the optical and near-infrared nebular spectra, achieving a good agreement with the observations. The light curve and spectroscopic features of ASASSN-20jq do not align with any single sub-class of SNe Ia. However, the significant deviation from the luminosity versus light-curve shape relations (along with several light-curve and spectroscopic features) exhibits similarities to some 2002es-like objects. Therefore, we have identified ASASSN-20jq as an extreme candidate within the broad and heterogeneous parameter space of 2002es-like SNe Ia. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  3. ABSTRACT Dust absorption is invoked in a number of contexts for hiding a star that has survived some sort of transient event from view. Dust formed in a transient is expanding away from the star and, in spherical models, the mass and energy budgets implied by a high optical depth at late times make such models untenable. Concentrating the dust in a disc or torus can in principle hide a source from an equatorial observer using less mass and so delay this problem. However, using axisymmetric dust radiation transfer models with a range of equatorial dust concentrations, we find that this is quite difficult to achieve in practice. The polar optical depth must be either low or high to avoid scattering optical photons to equatorial observers. Most of the emission remains at wavelengths easily observed by JWST. The equatorial brightness can be significantly suppressed for very discy configurations with little polar optical depth – but only by a factor of ∼2 for polar optical depths of τp = 1 and ∼5 for τp = 0.1 even for a very high optical depth disc (τe = 1000) viewed edge-on. It is particularly difficult to hide a source with silicate dusts because the absorption feature near 10 µm frequently leads to the emission being concentrated just bluewards of the feature, near 8 µm. 
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  4. Abstract We report the results from a pilot study to search for black holes and other dark companions in binary systems using direct imaging with SHARK-VIS and the iLocater pathfinder “Lili” on the Large Binocular Telescope. Starting from known single-lined spectroscopic binaries, we select systems with high mass functions that could host dark companions and whose spectroscopic orbits indicate a projected orbital separation ≥30 mas. For this first exploration, we selected four systems (HD 137909, HD 104438, HD 117044, and HD 176695). In each case, we identify a luminous companion and measure the flux ratio and angular separation. However, two of the systems (HD 104438 and HD 176695) are not consistent with simple binary systems and are most likely hierarchical triples. The observed companions rule out a massive compact object for HD 137909, HD 117044, and HD 176695. HD 104438 requires further study because the identified star cannot be responsible for the RV orbit and is likely a dwarf tertiary companion. The SHARK-VIS observation was taken near pericenter, and a second image near apocenter is needed to discriminate between a closely separated luminous secondary and a compact object. When a luminous companion is found, the combination of the RVs and the single SHARK-VIS observation strongly constrains the orbital inclination and the companion mass. Since a single SHARK-VIS observation has a typical on-source observing time of only ∼10 minutes, this a promising method to efficiently identify non-interacting compact object candidates. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 28, 2026
  5. We discuss ASASSN-24fw, a 13th-magnitude star that optically faded by Δ g = 4.12 ± 0.02 mag starting in September 2024 after over a decade of quiescence in ASAS-SN. The dimmimg lasted $$8 months before returning to quiescence in late May 2025. The spectral energy distribution (SED) before the event is that of a pre-main sequence or a modestly evolved F star with some warm dust emission. The shape of the optical SED during the dim phase is unchanged and the optical and near-infrared spectra are those of an F star. The SED and the dilution of some of the F star infrared absorption features near minimum suggest the presence of a $$ 0.25 M_$$ M dwarf binary companion. The 43.8 year period proposed by Nair & Denisenko (2024) appears correct and is probably half the precession period of a circumbinary disk. The optical eclipse is nearly achromatic, although slightly deeper in bluer filters, Δ ( g z ) = 0.31 ± 0.15 mag, and the V band emission is polarized by up to 4%. The materials most able to produce such small optical color changes and a high polarization are big ($$20 μ m) carbonaceous or water ice grains. Particle distributions dominated by big grains are seen in protoplanetary disks, Saturn-like ring systems and evolved debris disks. We also carry out a survey of occultation events, finding 46 additional systems, of which only 7 (4) closely match ε Aurigae (KH 15D), the two archetypes of stars with long and deep eclipses. The full sample is widely distributed in an optical color-magnitude diagram, but roughly half show a mid-IR excess. It is likely many of the others have cooler dust since it seems essential to produce the events. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
  6. ABSTRACT The progenitor of SN 2023ixf was an ∼104.8 to $$10^{5.0}\, \text{L}_\odot$$ star (∼9 to $$14\, \text{M}_\odot$$ at birth) obscured by a dusty $$\dot{M} \simeq 10^{-5}\, \text{M}_\odot \rm \, yr^{-1}$$ wind with a visual optical depth of τV ≃ 13. This is required by the progenitor spectral energy distribution, the post-SN X-ray and H α luminosities, and the X-ray column density estimates. In Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) data spanning 5600 to 400 d before the supernova (SN), there is no evidence for optical variability at the level of $$\sim 10^3\, \text{L}_\odot$$ in R band, roughly three times the predicted luminosity of the obscured progenitor. This constrains direct observation of any pre-SN optical outbursts where there are LBT observations. However, models of the effects of any pre-SN outburst on the dusty wind show that an outburst of essentially any duration exceeding ∼5 times the luminosity of the progenitor would have detectable effects on the dust optical depth for decades. While the dust obscuration here is high, all red supergiants have dusty winds, and the destruction (or formation) of dust by even short-lived transients will always have long-term effects on the observed brightness of the star because changes in the dust optical depths after a luminous transient occur very slowly. 
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  7. Aims.We have estimated black hole masses (MBH) for 14 gravitationally lensed quasars using Balmer lines; we also provide estimates based on MgII and CIV emission lines for four and two of them, respectively. We compared these estimates to results obtained for other lensed quasars. Methods.We used spectroscopic data from the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT),Magellan, and the Very Large Telescope (VLT) to measure the full width at half maximum of the broad emission lines. Combined with the bolometric luminosity measured from the spectral energy distribution, we estimatedMBHvalues and provide the uncertainties, including uncertainties from microlensing and variability. Results.We obtainedMBHvalues using the single-epoch method from the Hαand/or Hβbroad emission lines for 14 lensed quasars, including the first-ever estimates for QJ0158−4325, HE0512−3329, and WFI2026−4536. The masses are typical of non-lensed quasars of similar luminosities, as are the implied Eddington ratios. We have thus increased the sample of lenses withMBHestimates by 60%. 
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  8. ABSTRACT We examine the properties of ∼50 000 rotational variables from the ASAS-SN survey using distances, stellar properties, and probes of binarity from Gaia DR3 and the SDSS APOGEE survey. They have higher amplitudes and span a broader period range than previously studied Kepler rotators. We find they divide into three groups of main sequence stars (MS1, MS2s, MS2b) and four of giants (G1/3, G2, G4s, and G4b). MS1 stars are slowly rotating (10–30 d), likely single stars with a limited range of temperatures. MS2s stars are more rapidly rotating (days) single stars spanning the lower main sequence up to the Kraft break. There is a clear period gap (or minimum) between MS1 and MS2s, similar to that seen for lower temperatures in the Kepler samples. MS2b stars are tidally locked binaries with periods of days. G1/3 stars are heavily spotted, tidally locked RS CVn stars with periods of 10s of days. G2 stars are less luminous, heavily spotted, tidally locked sub-subgiants with periods of ∼10 d. G4s stars have intermediate luminosities to G1/3 and G2, slow rotation periods (approaching 100 d), and are almost certainly all merger remnants. G4b stars have similar rotation periods and luminosities to G4s, but consist of sub-synchronously rotating binaries. We see no difference in indicators for the presence of very wide binary companions between any of these groups and control samples of photometric twin stars built for each group. 
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  9. Abstract We present 307 type Ia supernova (SN) light curves from the first 4 yr of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission. We use this sample to characterize the shapes of the early-time light curves, measure the rise times from first light to peak, and search for companion star interactions. Using simulations, we show that light curves must have noise <10% of the peak flux to avoid biases in the early-time light-curve shape, restricting our quantitative analysis to 74 light curves. We find that the mean power-law index t β 1 of the early-time light curves isβ1= 1.93 ± 0.57, and the mean rise time to peak is 15.7 ± 3.5 days. The underlying population distribution forβ1may instead consist of a Gaussian component with mean 2.29, width 0.34, and a long tail extending to values less than 1.0. We find that the data can rarely distinguish between models with and without companion interaction models. Nevertheless, we find three high-quality light curves that tentatively prefer the addition of a companion interaction model, but the statistical evidence for the companion interactions is not robust. We also find two SNe that disfavor the addition of a companion interaction model to a curved power-law model. Taking the 74 SNe together, we calculate 3σupper limits on the presence of companion signatures to control for orientation effects that can hide companions in individual light curves. Our results rule out common progenitor systems with companions having Roche lobe radii >31R(separations >5.7 × 1012cm, 99.9% confidence level) and disfavor companions having Roche lobe radii >10R(separations >1.9 × 1012cm, 95% confidence level). Lastly, we discuss the implications of our results for the intrinsic fraction of single degenerate progenitor systems. 
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  10. ABSTRACT We present the volumetric rates and luminosity functions (LFs) of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the V-band All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) catalogues spanning discovery dates from UTC 2014 January 26 to UTC 2017 December 29. Our standard sample consists of 404 SNe Ia with $$m_{\mathrm{{\it V},peak}} \lt 17\, \mathrm{mag}$$ and Galactic latitude |b| > 15°. Our results are both statistically more precise and systematically more robust than previous studies due to the large sample size and high spectroscopic completeness. We make completeness corrections based on both the apparent and absolute magnitudes by simulating the detection of SNe Ia in ASAS-SN light curves. We find a total volumetric rate for all subtypes of $$R_{\mathrm{tot}} = 2.28^{+0.20}_{-0.20} \times 10^{4}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$ for $$M_{\mathrm{{\it V},peak}} \lt -16.5\, \mathrm{mag}$$ ($$R_{\mathrm{tot}} = 1.91^{+0.12}_{-0.12} \times 10^{4}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$ for $$M_{\mathrm{{\it V},peak}} \lt -17.5\, \mathrm{mag}$$) at the median redshift of our sample, zmed = 0.024. This is in agreement (1σ) with the local volumetric rates found by previous studies. We also compile LFs for the entire sample as well as for subtypes of SNe Ia for the first time. The major subtypes with more than one SN include Ia-91bg, Ia-91T, Ia-CSM, and Ia-03fg with total rates of $$R_{\mathrm{Ia-91bg}} = 1.4^{+0.5}_{-0.5} \times 10^{3}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$, $$R_{\mathrm{Ia-91T}} = 8.5^{+1.6}_{-1.7} \times 10^{2}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$, $$R_{\mathrm{Ia-CSM}} = 10^{+7}_{-7}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$, and $$R_{\mathrm{Ia-03fg}} = 30^{+20}_{-20}\, \mathrm{yr}^{-1}\, \mathrm{Gpc}^{-3}\, h^{3}_{70}$$, respectively. We estimate a mean host extinction of $$E(V-r) \approx 0.2\, \mathrm{mag}$$ based on the shift between our V band and the Zwicky Transient Facility r-band LFs. 
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