Low-Mass Eclipsing Binaries in the Initial Kepler Data Release
J.L. Coughlin, M. Lopez-Morales, T.E. Harrison, N. Ule, D.I. Hoffman

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of 231 low-mass eclipsing binary systems from Kepler data, doubling known systems and exploring period-dependent stellar radii, with implications for stellar evolution theories.
Contribution
It introduces a new sample of low-mass eclipsing binaries, extending the period range and providing novel techniques for their identification and modeling.
Findings
Identified 95 new low-mass binary systems suitable for follow-up.
Found evidence that stellar radii decrease with orbital period.
Discovered 7 new transiting planet candidates.
Abstract
We identify 231 objects in the newly released Cycle 0 dataset from the Kepler Mission as double-eclipse, detached eclipsing binary systems with Teff < 5500 K and orbital periods shorter than ~32 days. We model each light curve using the JKTEBOP code with a genetic algorithm to obtain precise values for each system. We identify 95 new systems with both components below 1.0 M_sun and eclipses of at least 0.1 magnitudes, suitable for ground-based follow-up. Of these, 14 have periods less than 1.0 day, 52 have periods between 1.0 and 10.0 days, and 29 have periods greater than 10.0 days. This new sample of main-sequence, low-mass, double-eclipse, detached eclipsing binary candidates more than doubles the number of previously known systems, and extends the sample into the completely heretofore unexplored P > 10.0 day period regime. We find preliminary evidence from these systems that the…
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