Absolute dimensions of eclipsing binaries. XXIX. The Am-type systems SW Canis Majoris and HW Canis Majoris
G. Torres, J. V. Clausen, H. Bruntt, A. Claret, J. Andersen, B., Nordstrom, R. P. Stefanik, and D. W. Latham

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the physical and chemical properties of two Am-type eclipsing binary stars, SW CMa and HW CMa, providing valuable data to test stellar evolution models and understand stellar peculiarities.
Contribution
It offers detailed mass, radius, temperature, and chemical composition measurements for two Am stars, comparing them with normal stars and stellar evolution predictions.
Findings
Masses and radii determined with errors below 2%
Chemical abundances characteristic of metallic-line stars
Good fit with current stellar evolution models
Abstract
CONTEXT: Accurate physical properties of eclipsing stars provide important constraints on models of stellar structure and evolution, especially when combined with spectroscopic information on their chemical composition. Empirical calibrations of the data also lead to accurate mass and radius estimates for exoplanet host stars. Finally, accurate data for unusual stellar subtypes, such as Am stars, also help to unravel the cause(s) of their peculiarities. AIMS: We aim to determine the masses, radii, effective temperatures, detailed chemical composition and rotational speeds for the Am-type eclipsing binaries SW CMa (A4-5m) and HW CMa (A6m) and compare them with similar normal stars. METHODS: Accurate radial velocities from the Digital Speedometers of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics were combined with previously published uvby photometry to determine precise physical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
