2018AJ....155..152S


Query : 2018AJ....155..152S

2018AJ....155..152S - Astron. J., 155, 152-152 (2018/April-0)

The K2 M67 study: a curiously young star in an eclipsing binary in an old open cluster.

SANDQUIST E.L., MATHIEU R.D., QUINN S.N., POLLACK M.L., LATHAM D.W., BROWN T.M., ESSELSTEIN R., AIGRAIN S., PARVIAINEN H., VANDERBURG A., STELLO D., SOMERS G., PINSONNEAULT M.H., TAYAR J., OROSZ J.A., BEDIN L.R., LIBRALATO M., MALAVOLTA L. and NARDIELLO D.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present an analysis of a slightly eccentric (e = 0.05), partially eclipsing, long-period (P = 69.73 days) main-sequence binary system (WOCS 12009, Sanders 1247) in the benchmark old open cluster M67. Using Kepler K2 and ground-based photometry, along with a large set of new and reanalyzed spectra, we derived highly precise masses (1.111 ± 0.015 and 0.748 ± 0.005 M) and radii (1.071 ± 0.008 ± 0.003 and 0.713 ± 0.019 ± 0.026 R, with statistical and systematic error estimates) for the stars. The radius of the secondary star is in agreement with theory. The primary, however, is approximately 15% smaller than reasonable isochrones for the cluster predict. Our best explanation is that the primary star was produced from the merger of two stars, as this can also account for the nondetection of photospheric lithium and its higher temperature relative to other cluster main-sequence stars at the same V magnitude. To understand the dynamical characteristics (low measured rotational line broadening of the primary star and low eccentricity of the current binary orbit), we believe that the most probable (but not the only) explanation is the tidal evolution of a close binary within a primordial triple system (possibly after a period of Kozai-Lidov oscillations), leading to merger approximately 1 Gyr ago. This star appears to be a future blue straggler that is being revealed as the cluster ages and the most massive main-sequence stars die out.

Abstract Copyright: © 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): binaries: eclipsing - binaries: spectroscopic - open clusters and associations: individual: M67 - stars: distances - stars: low-mass

Simbad objects: 12

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Number of rows : 12
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 188 OpC 00 47 11.5 +85 14 38           ~ 922 0
2 V* V404 CMa EB* 06 15 55.4282293368 -18 44 51.802812672     17.45 16.81   ~ 18 0
3 BD-15 2429 EB* 08 25 51.6016571448 -16 22 47.247090456   11.45 10.29 9.73 9.36 K7V+M0/2:V 49 0
4 Cl* NGC 2682 SAND 757 EB* 08 51 04.8272787384 +11 45 56.881089612 14.331 14.216 13.541   12.841 ~ 49 0
5 NGC 2682 OpC 08 51 23.0 +11 48 50           ~ 2342 0
6 Cl* NGC 2682 SAND 1036 EB* 08 51 28.1469477144 +11 49 27.495860592 13.262 13.27 12.809   12.184 F3 78 0
7 NGC 2682 195 SB* 08 51 36.0102891818 +11 46 33.602537041 13.539 13.4 12.682 12.328 11.915 G0 59 0
8 Cl* NGC 2682 ES II-216 * 08 51 37.0551624552 +11 46 32.944918188   21.072 19.453 18.8 17.185 ~ 9 0
9 NGC 2682 201 SB* 08 51 37.2504797616 +11 46 55.743874860 14.727 14.66 14.073   13.283 G1V 38 0
10 Cl* NGC 2682 SAND 1282 EB* 08 51 37.8473566296 +11 50 57.092451072 13.964 13.89 13.333   12.634 F7V 165 0
11 NGC 6811 OpC 19 37 21.6 +46 22 41   7.47 6.8     ~ 378 0
12 NGC 6819 OpC 19 41 18.5 +40 11 24   8.21 7.3     ~ 635 0

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