Calibrating convective-core overshooting with eclipsing binary systems. The case of low-mass main-sequence stars
G. Valle, M. Dell'Omodarme, P.G. Prada Moroni, S. Degl'Innocenti

TL;DR
This study assesses the uncertainties and biases in calibrating convective-core overshooting in low-mass main-sequence stars using eclipsing binary data, revealing significant limitations in current methods.
Contribution
It quantifies the impact of observational uncertainties and model assumptions on the calibration of the overshooting parameter $eta$ in stellar models.
Findings
Large statistical uncertainties in $eta$ during most of the MS.
Biases in $eta$ estimates are significant in early MS stages.
Calibration of $eta$ is unreliable overall.
Abstract
In a robust statistical way, we quantify the uncertainty that affects the calibration of the overshooting efficiency parameter that is owing to the uncertainty on the observational data in double-lined eclipsing binary systems. We also quantify the bias that is caused by the lack of constraints on the initial helium content and on the efficiencies of the superadiabatic convection and microscopic diffusion. We adopted a modified grid-based SCEPtER pipeline using as observational constraints the effective temperatures, [Fe/H], masses, and radii of the two stars. In a reference scenario of mild overshooting for the synthetic data, we found both large statistical uncertainties and biases on the estimated . For the first 80% of the MS evolution, is biased and practically unconstrained in the whole explored range [0.0; 0.4]. In the last 5% of the MS the…
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