The BANANA project. V. Misaligned and precessing stellar rotation axes in CV Velorum

Abstract

As part of the BANANA project (Binaries Are Not Always Neatly Aligned), we have found that the eclipsing binary CV Velorum has misaligned rotation axes. Based on our analysis of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, we find sky-projected spin-orbit angles of β p = -526 and β s= 37 for the primary and secondary stars (B2.5V + B2.5V, P=6.9 d). We combine this information with several measurements of changing projected stellar rotation speeds (v i) over the last 30 years, leading to a model in which the primary star's obliquity is ≈65, and its spin axis precesses around the total angular momentum vector with a period of about 140 years. The geometry of the secondary star is less clear, although a significant obliquity is also implicated by the observed time variations in the v i. By integrating the secular tidal evolution equations backward in time, we find that the system could have evolved from a state of even stronger misalignment similar to DI Herculis, a younger but otherwise comparable binary.

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