Discovery of a stripped red giant core in a bright eclipsing binary star
P. F. L. Maxted (1), D. R. Anderson (1), M. R. Burleigh (2), A., Collier-Cameron (3), U. Heber (4), B. T. G\"ansicke (5), S. Geier (4), T., Kupfer (4), T. R. Marsh (5), G. Nelemans (6), S. J. O'Toole (7), R. H., {\O}stensen (8), B. Smalley (1), R. G. West (2)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of a binary star system with a stripped red giant core, providing insights into stellar evolution and the properties of pre-helium white dwarfs.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed characterization of a stripped red giant core in a binary, including improved mass estimates and evolutionary implications.
Findings
J0247-25B is a stripped red giant in a shell hydrogen-burning stage.
Both stars in the binary are more massive than previously expected.
J0247-25A shows sub-synchronous rotation by a factor of about 2.
Abstract
We report the serendipitous discovery from WASP archive photometry of a binary star in which an apparently normal A-type star (J0247-25A) eclipses a smaller, hotter subdwarf star (J0247-25B). The kinematics of J0247-25A show that it is a blue-straggler member of the Galactic thick-disk. We present follow-up photometry and spectroscopy from which we derive approximate values for the mass, radius and luminosity for J0247-25B assuming that J0247-25A has the mass appropriate for a normal thick-disk star. We find that the properties of J0247-25B are well matched by models for a red giant stripped of its outer layers and currently in a shell hydrogen-burning stage. In this scenario, J0247-25B will go on to become a low mass white dwarf (M~0.25 solar masses) composed mostly of helium. J0247-25B can be studied in much greater detail than the handful of pre helium white dwarfs (pre-He-WD)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
