Dynamical parallax, physical parameters and evolutionary status of the components of the bright eclipsing binary {\alpha} Draconis
K. Pavlovski, C.A. Hummel, A. Tkachenko, A. Dervisoglu, C. Kayhan,, R.T. Zavala, D.J. Hutter, C. Tycner, T. Sahin, J. Audenaert, R. Baeyens, J., Bodensteiner, D.M. Bowman, S. Gebruers, N.E. Jannsen, and J.S.G. Mombarg

TL;DR
This study combines interferometry, photometry, and spectroscopy to detect and analyze the secondary star in the bright eclipsing binary α Draconis, providing new insights into stellar parameters and evolutionary status.
Contribution
It presents the first firm spectroscopic detection of the secondary component in α Draconis and combines multiple observational methods for comprehensive analysis.
Findings
Detected the secondary star spectroscopically for the first time.
Disentangled spectra of both binary components were obtained.
Results suggest near-core mixing properties are not dependent on stellar mass.
Abstract
Altough both components of the bright eclipsing binary Dra having been resolved using long baseline interferometry and the secondary component shown to contribute some 15\% of the total flux, a spectroscopic detection of the companion star was so far unsuccessful. To achieve our goals, we use a combined data set from interferometry with the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer (NPOI), photometry with the TESS space observatory, and high-resolution spectroscopy with the HERMES fibre-fed spectrograph at the La Palma observatory. We use the method of spectral disentangling to search for the contribution of a companion star in the observed composite HERMES spectra, to separate the spectral contributions of both components, and to determine orbital elements of the Dra system. TESS light curves are analysed in an iterative fashion with spectroscopic inference of stellar…
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