The Low-Mass Double-lined Eclipsing Binary CM Draconis: A Test of the Primordial Helium Abundance and the Mass-Radius Relation near the Bottom of the Main Sequence

1996 ◽  
Vol 456 ◽  
pp. 356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Travis S. Metcalfe ◽  
Robert D. Mathieu ◽  
David W. Latham ◽  
Guillermo Torres
2020 ◽  
Vol 495 (2) ◽  
pp. 1531-1548
Author(s):  
Edward Gillen ◽  
Lynne A Hillenbrand ◽  
John Stauffer ◽  
Suzanne Aigrain ◽  
Luisa Rebull ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We present Mon-735, a detached double-lined eclipsing binary (EB) member of the ∼3 Myr old NGC 2264 star-forming region, detected by Spitzer. We simultaneously model the Spitzer light curves, follow-up Keck/HIRES radial velocities, and the system’s spectral energy distribution to determine self-consistent masses, radii, and effective temperatures for both stars. We find that Mon-735 comprises two pre-main-sequence M dwarfs with component masses of M = 0.2918 ± 0.0099 and 0.2661 ± 0.0095 M⊙, radii of R = 0.762 ± 0.022 and 0.748 ± 0.023 R⊙, and effective temperatures of Teff = 3260 ± 73 and 3213 ± 73 K. The two stars travel on circular orbits around their common centre of mass in P = 1.9751388 ± 0.0000050 d. We compare our results for Mon-735, along with another EB in NGC 2264 (CoRoT 223992193), to the predictions of five stellar evolution models. These suggest that the lower mass EB system Mon-735 is older than CoRoT 223992193 in the mass–radius diagram (MRD) and, to a lesser extent, in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (HRD). The MRD ages of Mon-735 and CoRoT 223992193 are ∼7–9 and 4–6 Myr, respectively, with the two components in each EB system possessing consistent ages.


2014 ◽  
Vol 562 ◽  
pp. A50 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Gillen ◽  
S. Aigrain ◽  
A. McQuillan ◽  
J. Bouvier ◽  
S. Hodgkin ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (S258) ◽  
pp. 161-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keivan G. Stassun ◽  
Leslie Hebb ◽  
Mercedes López-Morales ◽  
Andrej Prša

AbstractEclipsing binary stars provide highly accurate measurements of the fundamental physical properties of stars. They therefore serve as stringent tests of the predictions of evolutionary models upon which most stellar age determinations are based. Models generally perform very well in predicting coeval ages for eclipsing binaries with main-sequence components more massive than ≈1.2 M⊙; relative ages are good to ~5% or better in this mass regime. Low-mass main-sequence stars (M < 0.8 M⊙) reveal large discrepancies in the model predicted ages, primarily due to magnetic activity in the observed stars that appears to inhibit convection and likely causes the radii to be 10–20% larger than predicted. In mass-radius diagrams these stars thus appear 50–90% older or younger than they really are. Aside from these activity-related effects, low-mass pre–main-sequence stars at ages ~1 Myr can also show non-coevality of ~30% due to star formation effects, however these effects are largely erased after ~10 Myr.


2011 ◽  
Vol 531 ◽  
pp. A61 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Hebb ◽  
H. M. Cegla ◽  
K. G. Stassun ◽  
H. C. Stempels ◽  
P. A. Cargile ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 615 ◽  
pp. A135 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Kirkby-Kent ◽  
P. F. L. Maxted ◽  
A. M. Serenelli ◽  
D. R. Anderson ◽  
C. Hellier ◽  
...  

Aims. Our aim is to measure the masses and radii of the stars in a newly-discovered detached eclipsing binary system to a high precision (≈1%), enabling the system to be used for the calibration of free parameters in stellar evolutionary models. Methods. Photometry from the Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP) project was used to identify 1SWASP J063930.33-322404.8 (TYC 7091-888-1, WASP 0369-32 hereafter) as a detached eclipsing binary system with total eclipses and an orbital period of P = 11.66 days. Lightcurve parameters for WASP 0639-32 are obtained using the EBOP lightcurve model, with standard errors evaluated using a prayer-bead algorithm. Radial velocities were measured from 11 high-resolution spectra using a broadening function approach, and an orbit was fitted using SBOP. Observed spectra were disentangled and an equivalent width fitting method was used to obtain effective temperatures and metallicities for both stars. A Bayesian framework is used to explore a grid of stellar evolution models, where both helium abundance and mixing length are free to vary, and use observed parameters (mass, density, temperature, and metallicity) for each star to obtain the age and constrain the helium abundance of the system. Results. The masses and radii are found to be M1 = 1.1544 ± 0.0043 M⊙, R1 = 1.833 ± 0.023 R⊙, and M2 = 0.7833 ± 0.0028 M⊙, R2 = 0.7286 ± 0.0081 R⊙ for the primary and secondary, respectively. The effective temperatures were found to be T1 = 6330 ± 50 K and T2 = 5400 ± 80 K for the primary and secondary star, respectively. The system has an age of 4.2−0.1+0.8 Gyr, and a helium abundance in the range 0.251–0.271. Conclusions. WASP 0639-32 is a rare example of a well-characterised detached eclipsing binary system containing a star near the main-sequence turn-off point. This makes it possible to measure a precise age for the stars in this binary system and to estimate their helium abundance. Further work is needed to explore how this helium abundance estimate depends on other free parameters in the stellar models.


2010 ◽  
Vol 522 ◽  
pp. A37 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Hebb ◽  
H. C. Stempels ◽  
S. Aigrain ◽  
A. Collier-Cameron ◽  
S. T. Hodgkin ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 674 (1) ◽  
pp. 329-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Cargile ◽  
K. G. Stassun ◽  
R. D. Mathieu

2020 ◽  
Vol 635 ◽  
pp. A77 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Valle ◽  
M. Dell’Omodarme ◽  
P. G. Prada Moroni ◽  
S. Degl’Innocenti

Aims. We performed a theoretical analysis aimed at quantifying the relevance of the small frequency separation δν in determining stellar ages, masses, and radii. We aimed to establish a minimum uncertainty on these quantities for low-mass stars across different evolutionary stages of the main sequence and to evaluate the biases that come from some systematic differences between the stellar model grid adopted for the recovery and the observed stars. Methods. We adopted the Stellar CharactEristics Pisa Estimation gRid (SCEPtER) pipeline for low-mass stars, [0.7, 1.05] M⊙, from the zero-age main sequence (ZAMS) to the central hydrogen depletion. For each model in the grid, we computed oscillation frequencies. Synthetic stars were generated and reconstructed based on different assumptions about the relative precision in the δν parameter (namely 5% and 2%). The quantification of the systematic errors arising from a possible mismatch between synthetic stars and the recovery grid was performed by generating stars from synthetic grids of stellar models with different initial helium abundance and microscopic diffusion efficiency. The results obtained without δν as an observable are included for comparison. Results. The investigation highlighted and confirmed the improvement in the age estimates when δν is available, which has already been reported in the literature. While the biases were negligible, the statistical error affecting age estimates was strongly dependent on the stellar evolutionary phase. The error is at its maximum at ZAMS and it decreases to about 11% and 6% (δν known at 5% and 2% level, respectively) when stars reach the 30% of their evolutionary MS lifetime. The usefulness of small frequency separation in improving age estimates vanishes in the last 20% of the MS. The availability of δν in the fit for mass and radius estimates provided an effect that was nearly identical to its effect on age, assuming an observational uncertainty of 5%. As a departure, with respect to age estimates, no benefit was detected for mass and radius determinations from a reduction of the observational error in δν to 2%. The age variability attributed to differences in the initial helium abundance resulted in negligible results owing to compensation effects that have already been discussed in previous works. On the other hand, the current uncertainty in the initial helium abundance leads to a greater bias (2% and 1% level) in mass and radius estimates whenever δν is in the observational pool. This result, together with the presence of further unexplored uncertainty sources, suggest that precision in the derived stellar quantities below these thresholds may possibly be overoptimistic. The impact of microscopic diffusion was investigated by adopting a grid of models for the recovery which totally neglected the process. The availability of the small frequency separation resulted in biases lower than 5% and 2% for observational errors of 5% and 2%, respectively. The estimates of mass and radius showed again a greater distortion when δν is included among the observables. These biases are at the level of 1%, confirming that threshold as a minimum realistic uncertainty on the derived stellar quantities. Finally, we compared the estimates by the SCEPtER pipeline for 13 Kepler asteroseismic LEGACY sample stars with those given by six different pipelines from literature. This procedure demonstrated a fair agreement for the results. The comparison suggests that a realistic approach to the determination of the error on the estimated parameters consists of approximately doubling the error in the recovered stellar characteristics from a single pipeline. Overall, on the LEGACY sample data, we obtained a multi-pipeline precision of about 4.4%, 1.7%, and 11% on the estimated masses, radii, and ages, respectively.


1995 ◽  
Vol 166 ◽  
pp. 181-186
Author(s):  
B.E.J. Pagel

The primordial helium abundance YP is important for cosmology and the ratio δY/δZ constrains models of stellar evolution. While the most accurate estimates of both quantities now come from emission lines in HII regions, significant information comes from effects of helium content on stellar structure including in particular the location of the main sequence as a function of metallicity and age. HIPPARCOS parallaxes with 1 or 2 mas accuracy will naturally lead to great advances in this type of study for stars with metallicities down to about 0.1 solar, but sub-mas accuracy will be needed in order to extend it to stars of still lower metallicity.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document