Discovery of a stripped red giant core in a bright eclipsing binary system
P.F.L. Maxted, D.R. Anderson, M.R. Burleigh, A. Collier-Cameron, U., Heber, B.T. Gaensicke, S. Geier, T. Kupfer, T.R. Marsh, G. Nelemans, S.J., O'Toole, R.H. Ostensen, B. Smalley, R.G. West

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a binary system with a stripped red giant core, providing insights into stellar evolution during the pre-helium white dwarf phase.
Contribution
It identifies a rare binary system with a stripped red giant core, offering a new case to study stellar evolution post-mass transfer.
Findings
Companion star has a mass of 0.23 solar masses and a radius of 0.33 solar radii.
The companion is likely a recently stripped red giant core in a shell hydrogen-burning phase.
The system resembles pre-He-WD/He-WD binaries observed by Kepler.
Abstract
We have identified a star in the WASP archive photometry with an unusual lightcurve due to the total eclipse of a small, hot star by an apparently normal A-type star and with an orbital period of only 0.668d. From an analysis of the WASP lightcurve together with V-band and I_C-band photometry of the eclipse and a spectroscopic orbit for the A-type star we estimate that the companion star has a mass of (0.23+-0.03)Msun and a radius of (0.33+-0.01)Rsun, assuming that the A-type star is a main-sequence star with the metalicity appropriate for a thick-disk star. The effective temperature of the companion is (13400+-1200)K from which we infer a luminosity of (3+-1)Lsun. From a comparison of these parameters to various models we conclude that the companion is most likely to be the remnant of a red giant star that has been very recently stripped of its outer layers by mass transfer onto the…
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