Bibcode
Fernandez, Jose M.; Latham, David W.; Torres, Guillermo; Everett, Mark E.; Mandushev, Georgi; Charbonneau, David; O'Donovan, Francis T.; Alonso, Roi; Esquerdo, Gilbert A.; Hergenrother, Carl W.; Stefanik, Robert P.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 701, Issue 1, pp. 764-775 (2009).
Advertised on:
8
2009
Journal
Citations
42
Refereed citations
38
Description
We have derived masses and radii for both components in five
short-period single-lined eclipsing binary stars discovered by the TrES
wide-angle photometric survey for transiting planets. All these systems
consist of a visible F-star primary and an unseen M-star secondary (M
A >= 0.8 M sun, M B <= 0.45 M
sun). The spectroscopic orbital solution combined with a
high-precision transit light curve for each system gives sufficient
information to calculate the density of the primary star and the surface
gravity of the secondary. The masses of the primary stars were obtained
using stellar evolution models, which requires accurate determinations
of metallicities and effective temperatures. In our case, the
uncertainty in the metallicity of the primary stars is the most
important limiting factor in order to obtain accurate results for the
masses and radii of the unseen M-dwarf secondaries. The solutions were
compared with results obtained by calculating the radius of the primary
stars under the assumption of rotational synchronization with the
orbital period and alignment between their spin axis and the axis of the
orbit, using the observed broadening of the spectral lines as an
indicator of stellar rotation. Four systems show an acceptable match
between the two sets of results when their metallicity is allowed to
vary around solar values (-0.5 <= [Fe/H] <= +0.5), but one system
shows a clear mismatch between the two solutions, which may indicate the
absence of synchronization or a misalignment between the rotational and
orbital axis. When compared to low-mass stellar evolution models, the
derived masses and radii of the unseen M dwarfs are inconsistent (three
only marginally) with the predicted values, with all of the radii being
larger than expected for their masses. These results confirm the
discrepancy shown in a previous work between the predicted and observed
radii on low-mass binary stars. This work also shows that reliance on
the assumption of synchronization to derive the mass and radius of stars
in eclipsing single-lined F+M binaries is a useful tool, but may not
always be warranted and should be carefully tested against stellar
evolution models.