The Very Short Period M Dwarf Binary SDSS J001641-000925
James R. A. Davenport, Andrew C. Becker, Andrew A. West, John J., Bochanski, Suzanne L. Hawley, Jon Holtzman, Heather C. Gunning, Eric J., Hilton, Ferah D. Munshi, Meagan Albright

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of SDSS J001641-000925, the shortest period M dwarf binary, likely in over-contact and actively losing angular momentum, providing insights into stellar coalescence.
Contribution
It presents the first verified M-dwarf contact binary with evidence of active mass transfer and period decay, suggesting a system in the process of coalescence.
Findings
System has a 0.19856-day orbital period, one of the shortest for M dwarf binaries.
Both stars are over the Roche limit, indicating contact binary status.
Evidence of period decay at ~8 seconds per year, implying angular momentum loss.
Abstract
We present follow-up observations and analysis of the recently discovered short period low-mass eclipsing binary, SDSS J001641-000925. With an orbital period of 0.19856 days, this system has one of the shortest known periods for an M dwarf binary system. Medium-resolution spectroscopy and multi-band photometry for the system are presented. Markov chain Monte Carlo modeling of the light curves and radial velocities yields estimated masses for the stars of M1 = 0.54 +/- 0.07 Msun and M2 = 0.34 +/- 0.04 Msun, and radii of R1 = 0.68 +/- 0.03 Rsun and R2 = 0.58 +/- 0.03 Rsun respectively. This solution places both components above the critical Roche overfill limit, providing strong evidence that SDSS J001641-000925 is the first verified M-dwarf contact binary system. Within the follow-up spectroscopy we find signatures of non-solid body rotation velocities, which we interpret as evidence for…
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