A New Class of Nascent Eclipsing Binaries with Extreme Mass Ratios
Maxwell Moe, Rosanne Di Stefano

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a new class of nascent eclipsing binaries with extreme mass ratios, involving young B-type stars and pre-main-sequence companions, shedding light on binary formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel observational class of young eclipsing binaries with extreme mass ratios, providing new data on their frequency and properties.
Findings
18 MS + pre-MS eclipsing binaries identified
Short orbital periods of 3.0-8.5 days observed
Approximately 2% of B-type stars have such companions
Abstract
Early B-type main-sequence (MS) stars (M = 5-16 M) with closely orbiting low-mass stellar companions (q = M/M < 0.25) can evolve to produce Type Ia supernovae, low-mass X-ray binaries, and millisecond pulsars. However, the formation mechanism and intrinsic frequency of such close extreme mass-ratio binaries have been debated, especially considering none have hitherto been detected. Utilizing observations of the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy conducted by the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, we have discovered a new class of eclipsing binaries in which a luminous B-type MS star irradiates a closely orbiting low-mass pre-MS companion that has not yet fully formed. The primordial pre-MS companions have large radii and discernibly reflect much of the light they intercept from the B-type MS primaries (I = 0.02-0.14 mag). For the 18…
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