KIC 8410637: a 408-day period eclipsing binary containing a pulsating red giant
S. Frandsen, H. Lehmann, S. Hekker, J. Southworth, J. Debosscher, P., Beck, M. Hartmann, A. Pigulski, G. Kopacki, Z. Kolaczkowski, A.O. Thygensen,, K. Brogaard, Y. Elsworth

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the masses and radii of a red giant and main sequence star in an eclipsing binary, validating asteroseismic methods and improving stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurements of both mass and radius for a red giant in an eclipsing binary, testing and supporting asteroseismic scaling relations.
Findings
Red giant is in the core helium-burning phase.
Measured parameters support current asteroseismic scaling relations.
Red giant's age and composition are similar to stars in NGC 6819.
Abstract
Detached eclipsing binaries (dEBs) are ideal targets for accurate measurement of masses and radii of ther component stars. If at least one of the stars has evolved off the main sequence (MS), the masses and radii give a strict constraint on the age of the stars. Several dEBs containing a bright K giant and a fainter MS star have been discovered by the Kepler satellite. The mass and radius of a red giant (RG) star can also be derived from its asteroseismic signal. The parameters determined in this way depend on stellar models and may contain systematic errors. It is important to validate the asteroseismically determined mass and radius with independent methods. This can be done when stars are members of stellar clusters or members of dEBs. KIC 8410637 consists of an RG and an MS star. The aim is to derive accurate masses and radii for both components and provide the foundation for a…
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