TESS Asteroseismology of $\alpha$ Mensae: Benchmark Ages for a G7 Dwarf and its M-dwarf Companion
Ashley Chontos, Daniel Huber, Travis A. Berger, Hans Kjeldsen, Aldo M., Serenelli, Victor Silva Aguirre, Warrick H. Ball, Sarbani Basu, Timothy R., Bedding, William J. Chaplin, Zachary R. Claytor, Enrico Corsaro, Rafael A., Garc\'ia, Steve B. Howell, Mia S. Lundkvist

TL;DR
This paper presents the first asteroseismic analysis of the bright G7 dwarf alpha Men A and its M-dwarf companion, providing precise age, mass, and radius estimates, and establishing it as a key benchmark for stellar and exoplanet studies.
Contribution
It introduces the discovery of solar-like oscillations in alpha Men A and develops empirical relations for the M-dwarf companion, enabling precise characterization of both stars.
Findings
Asteroseismic age of 6.2 Gyr for alpha Men A
Empirical relations for M-dwarf mass, radius, and temperature
Alpha Men A is the closest solar analog with a precise asteroseismic age
Abstract
Asteroseismology of bright stars has become increasingly important as a method to determine fundamental properties (in particular ages) of stars. The Kepler Space Telescope initiated a revolution by detecting oscillations in more than 500 main-sequence and subgiant stars. However, most Kepler stars are faint, and therefore have limited constraints from independent methods such as long-baseline interferometry. Here, we present the discovery of solar-like oscillations in Men A, a naked-eye (V=5.1) G7 dwarf in TESS's Southern Continuous Viewing Zone. Using a combination of astrometry, spectroscopy, and asteroseismology, we precisely characterize the solar analog alpha Men A (Teff = 5569 +/- 62 K, R = 0.960 +/- 0.016 Rsun, M = 0.964 +/- 0.045 Msun). To characterize the fully convective M dwarf companion, we derive empirical relations to estimate mass, radius, and temperature given…
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