Kepler Studies of Low-Mass Eclipsing Binaries I. Parameters of the Long-Period Binary KIC 6131659
Gideon Bass, Jerome A. Orosz, William F. Welsh, Gur Windmiller, Trevor, Ames Gregg, Tara Fetherolf, Richard A. Wade, Samuel N. Quinn

TL;DR
This study precisely measured the masses and radii of a long-period low-mass eclipsing binary, finding it aligns with theoretical models and exhibits minimal stellar activity, unlike shorter-period counterparts.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed parameters of a long-period low-mass binary that conforms to models, challenging the notion that all such stars are inflated due to magnetic activity.
Findings
Stars sit on theoretical isochrone in mass-radius plane.
Minimal stellar activity observed in long-period system.
Very low orbital eccentricity measured.
Abstract
KIC 6131659 is a long-period (17.5 days) eclipsing binary discovered by the Kepler mission. We analyzed six quarters of Kepler data along with supporting ground-based photometric and spectroscopic data to obtain accurate values for the mass and radius of both stars, namely M_1=0.922 +/- 0.007 M_sun, R_1=0.8800 +/- 0.0028 R_sun, and M_2=0.685 +/- 0.005 M_sun, R_2=0.6395 +/- 0.0061 R_sun. There is a well-known issue with low mass (M <<0.8 M_sun) stars (in cases where the mass and radius measurement uncertainties are smaller than two or three percent) where the measured radii are almost always 5 to 15 percent larger than expected from evolutionary models, i.e. the measured radii are all above the model isochrones in a mass-radius plane. In contrast, the two stars in KIC 6131659 were found to sit on the same theoretical isochrone in the mass-radius plane. Until recently, all of the…
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