I. I. Balega
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by I. I. Balega.
Astrophysical Bulletin | 2007
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; A. F. Maksimov; E. V. Malogolovets; D. A. Rastegaev; Z. U. Shkhagosheva; G. Weigelt
The results of speckle interferometric observations of 104 binary and 6 triple stars performed at the BTA 6 m telescope in 2004 October are presented. Nearby low-mass stars are mostly observed for the program, among which 59 there are new binaries recently discovered by the Hipparcos astrometric satellite. Concurrently with the diffraction-limited position measurements we obtained 154 brightness ratio measurements of binary and multiple star components in different bands of the visible spectrum. New, first-resolved binaries are the symbiotic star CH Cyg with a weak companion at 0.043″ separation and the pair of red dwarfs, GJ 913 = HIP 118212. In addition, we derived the orbital parameters for two interferometric systems: the CN-giant pair HD 210211 = HIP 109281 (P = 10.7 yr) and the G2V-K2V G2V-K2V binary GJ 9830 = HIP 116259 (P = 15.7 yr).
Astrophysical Bulletin | 2013
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; L. T. Gasanova; V. V. Dyachenko; A. F. Maksimov; E. V. Malogolovets; D. A. Rastegaev; Z. U. Shkhagosheva
We present the measurements of positional parameters of 194 nearby binary stars performed at the 6-m BTA telescope of the SAO RAS from 2002 through 2006 applying the speckle interferometric technique. The observations were conducted at central filter wavelengths ranging from 545 to 800 nm using a speckle interferometer equipped with a fast CCD and a three-stage image intensifier. A significant part of the observed systems (80 stars) are pairs, the duality of which was discovered or suspected from the Hipparcos satellite observations. The remaining stars are visual binaries and interferometric binary systems with orbital motion period estimates from several to tens of years, as well as the pairs with slow relative motion of the components, used for gaging the image scales and positional angle calibrations.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; E. V. Malogolovets
We present apparent orbits and fundamental parameters of three pairs of early M-type dwarfs. The orbital elements are determined from speckle interferometric observations at the 6-m BTA telescope of the Special Astrophysical Observatory. The orbits of two pairs, HIP39402 and HIP 104565 are built for the first time. The orbit of HIP106972 is revised using new observational data obtained in 2007–2008. The periods of motion and semimajor axes of all the three binaries have very similar values, namely 13 years and 5.5–6 AU, respectively. The dynamical total masses of the systems, obtained from the orbital elements are determined with quite large errors of 25–40%, which is due to the parallax errors.
Astronomy Letters | 2001
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; K.-H. Hofmann; G. Weigelt
Infrared speckle-masking observations of eleven binary systems with the 6-m Special Astrophysical Observatory telescope are presented. A resolution of 43 mas in J (1.25 µm) and 76 mas in K (2.2 µm) has been achieved in reconstructed images. Accurate magnitude differences, separations, and position angles have been determined for all the resolved binaries. The pair HR 1071 with an abnormally low lithium abundance is considered in more detail.
Archive | 2008
I. I. Balega; Y.Y. Balega; K.-H. Hofmann; E. V. Malogolovets; D. Schertl; Z. U. Shkhagosheva; G. Weigelt
First orbits are derived for 12 new Hipparcos binary systems based on the precise speckle interferometric measurements of the relative positions of the components. The orbital periods of the pairs are between 5.9 and 29.0 yrs. Magnitude differences obtained from differential speckle photometry allow us to estimate the absolute magnitudes and spectral types of individual stars and to compare their position on the mass-magnitude diagram with the theoretical curves. The spectral types of the new orbiting pairs range from late F to early M. Their mass-sums are determined with a relative accuracy of 10-30%. The mass errors are completely defined by the errors of Hipparcos parallaxes.
Archive | 1987
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega
Archive | 1993
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; I. N. Belkin; V. A. Vasyuk; A. F. Maksimov
Archive | 2008
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; A. F. Maksimov; E. V. Malogolovets; D. A. Rastegaev; Z. U. Shkhagosheva; G. Weigelt
Archive | 2004
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; A. F. Maksimov; Eugene A. Pluzhnik; D. Schertl; Z. U. Shkhagosheva; G. Weigelt
Archive | 2002
I. I. Balega; Yu. Yu. Balega; K.-H. Hofmann; A. F. Maksimov; Eugene A. Pluzhnik; D. Schertl; Z. U. Shkhagosheva; G. Weigelt