Determining the Age of the Kepler Open Cluster NGC 6819 With a New Triple System and Other Eclipsing Binary Stars
Lauren N. Brewer, Eric L. Sandquist, Robert D. Mathieu, Katelyn, Milliman, Aaron M. Geller, Mark W. Jeffries Jr., Jerome A. Orosz, Karsten, Brogaard, Imants Platais, Hans Bruntt, Frank Grundahl, Dennis Stello, Soeren, Frandsen

TL;DR
This study uses detailed observations of eclipsing binary stars in the NGC 6819 cluster to precisely determine its age and distance, improving our understanding of stellar evolution in old open clusters.
Contribution
It presents new measurements of binary star parameters and a refined age estimate for NGC 6819, utilizing a triple system and multiple eclipsing binaries for the first time.
Findings
Cluster age estimated at 2.21 Gyr with combined methods.
Distance modulus determined as (m-M)_V=12.38.
Enhanced constraints on stellar evolution models.
Abstract
As part of our study of the old (~2.5 Gyr) open cluster NGC 6819 in the Kepler field, we present photometric (Kepler and ground-based BVRcIc) and spectroscopic observations of the detached eclipsing binary WOCS 24009 (Auner 665; KIC 5023948) with a short orbital period of 3.6 days. WOCS 24009 is a triple-lined system, and we verify that the brightest star is physically orbiting the eclipsing binary using radial velocities and eclipse timing variations. The eclipsing binary components have masses M_B =1.090+/-0.010 Msun and M_C =1.075+/-0.013 Msun, and radii R_B =1.095+/-0.007 Rsun and R_C =1.057+/-0.008 Rsun. The bright non-eclipsing star resides at the cluster turnoff, and ultimately its mass will directly constrain the turnoff mass: our preliminary determination is M_A =1.251+/-0.057 Msun. A careful examination of the light curves indicates that the fainter star in the eclipsing…
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