Orbital and physical parameters of eclipsing binaries from the ASAS catalogue -- III. Two new low-mass systems with rapidly evolving spots
K. G. He{\l}miniak, M. Konacki, K. Z{\l}oczewski, M. Ratajczak, D. E., Reichart, K. M. Ivarsen, J. B. Haislip, J. A. Crain, A. C. Foster, M. C., Nysewander, A. P. LaCluyze

TL;DR
This study analyzes two low-mass eclipsing binary systems from the ASAS catalogue, revealing their physical parameters and demonstrating that stellar activity causes observable out-of-eclipse modulations.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic and photometric analysis of two low-mass binaries with evolving stellar spots, providing insights into their physical properties and activity effects.
Findings
Both systems are active main sequence binaries with nearly-twin or similar mass components.
Observed radii are larger and temperatures lower than evolutionary model predictions.
Stellar spots cause significant, time-variable out-of-eclipse brightness modulations.
Abstract
We present the results of our spectroscopic and photometric analysis of two newly discovered low-mass detached eclipsing binaries found in the All-Sky Automated Survey (ASAS) catalogue: ASAS J093814-0104.4 and ASAS J212954-5620.1. Using the GIRAFFE instrument on the 1.9-m Radcliffe telescope at SAAO and the UCLES spectrograph on the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope, we obtained high-resolution spectra of both objects and derived their radial velocities (RVs) at various orbital phases. The RVs of both objects were measured with the TODCOR technique using synthetic template spectra as references. We also obtained V and I band photometry using the 1.0-m Elizabeth telescope at SAAO and the 0.4-m PROMPT instruments located at the CTIO. The orbital and physical parameters of the systems were derived with PHOEBE and JKTEBOP codes. We compared our results with several sets of widely-used…
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