We present results of CCD photometric observations of the short-period W UMatype contact binary system, RZ Com. The light curve of the binary has changed from Wsubtype to A-subtype from 1998 to 2003, then back to W-subtype in 2004. An analysis was carried out using the 2003 version of the Wilson-Devinney code. It is confirmed that RZ Com is a low-degree, overcontact f = 20.1% (±7.4%) binary system with a high inclination of i = 81.°40 (+0.°40), and a mass ratio q = 2.351 (+0.031). Combining four newly determined times of light minimum with others in the literature, the variations in orbital period is examined. A small-amplitude oscillation (A=0.0065d), with a period of 41.5 year, is discovered superimposed on a long-term increase at rate dP/dt = +3.97 × 10^-8d yr^-1. The period oscillation can be explained either by the light-time effect due to the presence of an unseen third body, or by cycles of magnetic activity on the components. Combining our photometric solution with the spectroscopic elements obtained by Mclean & Hilditch, the absolute dimensions ofRZ Com are: M1 = 1.14 (±0.19)M⊙, M2 = 0.50 (±0.09)M⊙, R1 = 1.12 (±0.01)R⊙, R2 = 0.78 (+0.01)R⊙ and A = 2.41 (±0.02)R⊙.
AI Crucis is a short-period semi-detached massive close binary (P = 1.41771d, Sp.=B1.5) in the open cluster NGC 4103. It is a good astrophysical laboratory for investigating the formation and evolution of massive close binary stars via case A mass transfer. Orbital period variations of the system were analyzed based on one newly determined eclipse time and the others compiled from the literature. It is discovered that the orbital period of the binary is continuously increasing at a rate of dP/dt = +1.00(±0.04) × 10-7 d yr-1. After the long-term increase is subtracted from the O - C diagram, weak evidence indicates the presence of a cyclic oscillation with a period of 30.1yr, which may reveal a very cool stellar companion in the system. The long-term period increase can be explained by mass transfer from the less massive component to the more massive one. This is in agreement with the semidetached configuration of the binary, indicating that the system is undergoing a slow mass-transfer stage on the nuclear time scale of the secondary. However, it is found that the slow mass transfer is insufficient to cause the observed period increase, which suggests that the stellar wind from the hot component should contribute to the amount of period increase dP/dt = +0.54× 10-7 d yr-1 that corresponds to a mass loss rate of M˙1 = 2.72 × 10-7 M yr-1. It is estimated that the hot component lost a total mass of 4.1M during the slow mass-transfer stage and, thus, the evolution of the binary system should be changed greatly by the mass loss.
Er-Gang ZhaoSheng-Bang QianE. Femanindez LajusCarolina von EssenLi-Ying Zhu