The Tess Light Curve Of The Eccentric Eclipsing Binary 1swasp J011351.29+314909.7-No Evidence For A Very Hot M-Dwarf Companion

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY(2020)

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摘要
A 2014 study of the eclipsing binary star 1SWASPJ011351.29+314909.7 (J0113+31) reported an unexpectedly high effective temperature for the M-dwarf companion to the 0.95-M-circle dot primary star. The effective temperature inferred from the secondary eclipse depth was similar to 600 K higher than the value predicted from stellar models. Such an anomalous result questions our understanding of low-mass stars and might indicate a significant uncertainty when inferring properties of exoplanets orbiting them. We seek to measure the effective temperature of the M-dwarf companion using the light curve of J0113+31 recently observed by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). We use the pycheops modelling software to fit a combined transit and eclipse model to the TESS light curve. To calculate the secondary effective temperature, we compare the best-fitting eclipse depth to the predicted eclipse depths from theoretical stellar models. We determined the effective temperature of the M dwarf to be T-eff,T- 2 = 3208 +/- 43 K, assuming log g(2) = 5, [Fe/H]= -0.4, and no alpha-element enhancement. Varying these assumptions changes T-eff,T- 2 by less than 100 K. These results do not support a large anomaly between observed and theoretical low-mass star temperatures.
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techniques: photometric, binaries: eclipsing, stars: fundamental parameters, stars: low-mass, stars: individual: 2MASS J01135129+3149097
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