Post Common Envelope Binaries from SDSS. XV: Accurate stellar parameters for a cool 0.4-solar mass white dwarf and a 0.16-solar mass M-dwarf in a 3 hour eclipsing binary
S. Pyrzas, B. T. Gaensicke, S. Brady, S. G. Parsons, T. R. Marsh, D., Koester, E. Breedt, C. M. Copperwheat, A. Nebot Gomez-Moran, A., Rebassa-Mansergas, M. R. Schreiber, M. Zorotovic

TL;DR
This paper precisely characterizes a rare eclipsing binary system with a cool, low-mass white dwarf and an M-dwarf companion, providing detailed stellar parameters and insights into its composition and evolutionary state.
Contribution
The study presents accurate measurements of stellar parameters for a unique post-common-envelope binary, including masses, radii, and composition, using combined spectroscopic and photometric analysis.
Findings
White dwarf mass: 0.415 solar masses
Secondary star mass: 0.158 solar masses
White dwarf likely has a helium core
Abstract
We identify SDSSJ121010.1+334722.9 as an eclipsing post-common-envelope binary, with an orbital period of P ~ 3 hrs, containing a very cool, low-mass, DAZ white dwarf and a low-mass main-sequence star of spectral type M5. A model atmosphere analysis of the metal absorption lines detected in the blue part of the optical spectrum, along with the GALEX near-ultraviolet flux, yields a white dwarf temperature of 6000 +/- 200 K and a metallicity value of log(Z/H)= -2.0 +/- 0.3. The sodium absorption doublet is used to measure the radial velocity of the secondary star, K2 ~ 252 km/s and iron absorption lines in the blue part of the spectrum provide the radial velocity of the white dwarf, K1 ~ 95 km/s, yielding a mass ratio of q ~ 0.38. Light curve model fitting, using the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method, gives the inclination angle as i = (79.05 - 79.36) +/- 0.15 degrees, and the…
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