Characteristics of Kepler Eclipsing Binaries Displaying a Significant O'Connell Effect
Matthew F. Knote, Saida M. Caballero-Nieves, Vayujeet Gokhale, Kyle B., Johnston, Eric S. Perlman

TL;DR
This study analyzes 212 Kepler eclipsing binary systems with a significant O'Connell effect, revealing correlations with system properties and suggesting that stellar interaction causes the effect.
Contribution
It is the largest detailed study of O'Connell effect systems, linking the effect to stellar interactions and characterizing their properties.
Findings
O'Connell effect occurs only in close binary systems.
Most systems with the effect have the brighter maximum after primary eclipse.
Up to 20% show eclipse timing variations indicating mass transfer.
Abstract
The O'Connell effect - the presence of unequal maxima in eclipsing binaries - remains an unsolved riddle in the study of close binary systems. The Kepler space telescope produced high precision photometry of nearly 3,000 eclipsing binary systems, providing a unique opportunity to study the O'Connell effect in a large sample and in greater detail than in previous studies. We have characterized the observational properties - including temperature, luminosity, and eclipse depth - of a set of 212 systems (7.3% of Kepler eclipsing binaries) that display a maxima flux difference of at least 1%, representing the largest sample of O'Connell effect systems yet studied. We explored how these characteristics correlate with each other to help understand the O'Connell effect's underlying causes. We also describe some system classes with peculiar light curve features aside from the O'Connell effect…
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