WASP 1628+10 - an EL CVn-type binary with a very-low-mass stripped-red-giant star and multi-periodic pulsations
P. F. L. Maxted (1), A. M. Serenelli (2), T. R. Marsh (3), S., Catal\'an (3), D. P. Mahtani (1), V. S. Dhillon (4) ((1) Keele, UK, (2), CSIC-IEEC, Spain, (3) Warwick, UK, (4) Sheffield, UK)

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the binary star WASP 1628+10, revealing a very-low-mass pre-helium white dwarf and a pulsating A-type star, providing insights into stellar evolution and pulsation phenomena.
Contribution
It presents detailed measurements and modeling of the binary components, confirming the pre-He-WD nature of one star and identifying multi-periodic pulsations, including high-frequency modes.
Findings
WASP 1628+10B is a pre-He-WD with ~0.135 M_sun and ~9200K.
WASP 1628+10A is a normal A2V star with 1.36 M_sun and T_eff ~7500K.
Detection of multi-periodic pulsations, including high-frequency modes in the system.
Abstract
The star 1SWASP J162842.31+101416.7 (WASP 1628+10) is one of several EL CVn-type stars recently identified using the WASP database, i.e., an eclipsing binary star in which an A-type dwarf star (WASP 1628+10A) eclipses the remnant of a disrupted red giant star (WASP1628+10B). We have measured the masses, radii and luminosities of the stars in WASP 1628+10 using photometry obtained in three bands (u', g', r') with the Ultracam instrument and medium-resolution spectroscopy. The properties of the remnant are well-matched by models for stars in a rarely-observed state evolving to higher effective temperatures at nearly constant luminosity prior to becoming a very low-mass white dwarf composed almost entirely of helium, i.e., we confirm that WASP 1628+10B is a pre-He-WD. WASP 1628+10A appears to be a normal A2V star with a mass of . By fitting models to the spectrum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
