TY - JOUR
T1 - Eclipse Timing the Milky Way's Gravitational Potential
AU - Chakrabarti, Sukanya
AU - Stevens, Daniel J.
AU - Wright, Jason
AU - Rafikov, Roman R.
AU - Chang, Philip
AU - Beatty, Thomas
AU - Huber, Daniel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2022/4/1
Y1 - 2022/4/1
N2 - We show that a small but measurable shift in the eclipse midpoint time of eclipsing binary (EBs) stars of 0.1 s over a decade baseline can be used to directly measure the Galactic acceleration of stars in the Milky Way at kiloparsec distances from the Sun. We consider contributions to the period drift rate from dynamical mechanisms other than the Galaxy's gravitational field and show that the Galactic acceleration can be reliably measured using a sample of Kepler EBs with orbital and stellar parameters from the literature. The contribution from tidal decay we estimate here is an upper limit assuming the stars are not tidally synchronized. We find there are about 200 detached EBs that have estimated timing precision better than 0.5 s, and for which other dynamical effects are subdominant to the Galactic signal. We illustrate the method with a prototypical, precisely timed EB using an archival Kepler light curve and a modern synthetic HST light curve (which provides a decade baseline). This novel method establishes a realistic possibility to constrain dark matter substructure and the Galactic potential using eclipse timing to measure Galactic accelerations, along with other emerging new methods, including pulsar timing and extreme-precision radial velocity observations. This acceleration signal grows quadratically with time. Therefore, given baselines established in the near future for distant EBs, we can expect to measure the period drift in the future with space missions like JWST and the Roman Space Telescope.
AB - We show that a small but measurable shift in the eclipse midpoint time of eclipsing binary (EBs) stars of 0.1 s over a decade baseline can be used to directly measure the Galactic acceleration of stars in the Milky Way at kiloparsec distances from the Sun. We consider contributions to the period drift rate from dynamical mechanisms other than the Galaxy's gravitational field and show that the Galactic acceleration can be reliably measured using a sample of Kepler EBs with orbital and stellar parameters from the literature. The contribution from tidal decay we estimate here is an upper limit assuming the stars are not tidally synchronized. We find there are about 200 detached EBs that have estimated timing precision better than 0.5 s, and for which other dynamical effects are subdominant to the Galactic signal. We illustrate the method with a prototypical, precisely timed EB using an archival Kepler light curve and a modern synthetic HST light curve (which provides a decade baseline). This novel method establishes a realistic possibility to constrain dark matter substructure and the Galactic potential using eclipse timing to measure Galactic accelerations, along with other emerging new methods, including pulsar timing and extreme-precision radial velocity observations. This acceleration signal grows quadratically with time. Therefore, given baselines established in the near future for distant EBs, we can expect to measure the period drift in the future with space missions like JWST and the Roman Space Telescope.
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U2 - 10.3847/2041-8213/ac5c43
DO - 10.3847/2041-8213/ac5c43
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85128696875
SN - 2041-8205
VL - 928
JO - Astrophysical Journal Letters
JF - Astrophysical Journal Letters
IS - 2
M1 - L17
ER -