The Araucaria Project. Precise physical parameters of the eclipsing binary IO Aqr
D. Graczyk, P. F. L. Maxted, G. Pietrzynski, B. Pilecki, P. Konorski,, W. Gieren, J. Storm, A. Gallenne, R. I. Anderson, K. Suchomska, R. G. West,, D. Pollacco, F. Faedi, G. Pojmanski

TL;DR
This study precisely measures the physical parameters of the eclipsing binary IO Aqr, a hierarchical triple system, and derives its distance using surface brightness-colour relations, aiming to improve stellar parameter calibrations for future Gaia data.
Contribution
The paper provides high-precision measurements of the binary's parameters and identifies the system as a hierarchical triple, enhancing calibration of surface brightness-colour relations.
Findings
Inner binary stars are slightly evolved main-sequence stars with well-measured masses and radii.
The system's distance is determined with high precision, aligning with Hipparcos data.
IO Aqr is a hierarchical triple with a long-period, eccentric companion.
Abstract
Our aim is to precisely measure the physical parameters of the eclipsing binary IO Aqr and derive a distance to this system by applying a surface brightness - colour relation. Our motivation is to combine these parameters with future precise distance determinations from the GAIA space mission to derive precise surface brightness - colour relations for stars. We extensively used photometry from the Super-WASP and ASAS projects and precise radial velocities obtained from HARPS and CORALIE high-resolution spectra. We analysed light curves with the code JKTEBOP and radial velocity curves with the Wilson-Devinney program. We found that IO Aqr is a hierarchical triple system consisting of a double-lined short-period (P=2.37 d) spectroscopic binary and a low-luminosity and low-mass companion star orbiting the binary with a period of ~25000 d (~70 yr) on a very eccentric orbit. We derive…
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