Eclipsing binaries in the open cluster Ruprecht 147. I: EPIC 219394517
Guillermo Torres (1), Jason L. Curtis (2), Andrew Vanderburg (3,4),, Adam L. Kraus (3), and Aaron Rizzuto (3) ((1) CfA, (2) Columbia Univ., (3), Univ. of Texas at Austin, (4) NASA Sagan Fellow)

TL;DR
This study precisely characterizes an eclipsing binary in Ruprecht 147, providing stringent tests for stellar evolution models by comparing observed properties with theoretical predictions at a known age and composition.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of an eclipsing binary in Ruprecht 147, offering precise stellar parameters to test and validate stellar evolution models at a specific age and metallicity.
Findings
Stellar parameters match models at ~2.5 Gyr.
Binary orbit is nearly circular with a 6.5-day period.
Good agreement with Gaia parallax and cluster properties.
Abstract
Eclipsing binaries in star clusters offer more stringent tests of stellar evolution theory than field binaries because models must not only match the binary properties, but also the radiative properties of all other cluster members at a single chemical composition and a single age. Here we report new spectroscopic observations of the G type, detached eclipsing binary EPIC 219394517 in the open cluster Ruprecht 147 ([Fe/H] = +0.10), which was observed in late 2015 by the K2 mission. A joint analysis of our radial-velocity measurements and the K2 light curve shows the 6.5 day orbit to be very nearly circular. We derive highly precise masses of 1.0782 +/- 0.0019 Msun and 1.0661 (+0.0027/-0.0021) Msun, radii of 1.055 +/- 0.011 Rsun and 1.042 +/- 0.012 Rsun, and effective temperatures of 5930 +/- 100 K and 5880 +/- 100 K for the primary and secondary, respectively. The distance we infer, 283…
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