Interrelated Main-Sequence Mass-Luminosity, Mass-Radius and Mass-Effective Temperature Relations
Z. Eker, V. Bakis, S. Bilir, F. Soydugan, I. Steer, E. Soydugan, H., Bakis, F. Alicavus, G. Aslan, M. Alpsoy

TL;DR
This study derives interrelated mass-luminosity, mass-radius, and mass-temperature relations for main-sequence stars using observational data, enabling estimation of stellar parameters from temperature measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a six-piece classical mass-luminosity relation and interrelated functions for mass-radius and mass-temperature, improving parameter estimation for main-sequence stars.
Findings
MLR best expressed by a six-piece classical relation
Distinct mass ranges with different MRR and MTR functions
Interrelated functions enable parameter estimation from temperature data
Abstract
Absolute parameters of 509 main-sequence stars selected from the components of detached-eclipsing spectroscopic binaries in the Solar neighbourhood are used to study mass-luminosity, mass-radius and mass-effective temperature relations (MLR, MRR and MTR). The MLR function is found better if expressed by a six-piece classical MLR () rather than a fifth or a sixth degree polynomial within the mass range of . The break points separating the mass-ranges with classical MLR do not appear to us to be arbitrary. Instead, the data indicate abrupt changes along the mass axis in the mean energy generation per unit of stellar mass. Unlike the MLR function, the MRR and MTR functions cannot be determined over the full range of masses. A single piece MRR function is calibrated from the radii of stars with , while a second single…
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