A Low-mass, Pre-main-sequence Eclipsing Binary in the 40 Myr Columba Association -- Fundamental Stellar Parameters and Modeling the Effect of Star Spots
Benjamin M. Tofflemire, Adam L. Kraus, Andrew W. Mann, Elisabeth R., Newton, Michael A. Gully-Santiago, Andrew Vanderburg, William C. Waalkes,, Zachory K. Berta-Thompson, Kevin I. Collins, Karen A. Collins, Louise D., Nielsen, Francois Bouchy, Carl Ziegler, Cesar Briceno

TL;DR
This study characterizes a young, low-mass eclipsing binary in the 40 Myr Columba association, providing precise stellar parameters and modeling star spot effects to improve understanding of pre-main-sequence stellar evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to incorporate star spot effects into eclipse modeling and provides precise measurements of stellar parameters for a young binary system.
Findings
Derived stellar masses and radii with high precision.
Star spots reduce inferred radii by about 2%.
Good agreement with certain stellar evolution models.
Abstract
Young eclipsing binaries (EBs) are powerful probes of early stellar evolution. Current models are unable to simultaneously reproduce the measured and derived properties that are accessible for EB systems (e.g., mass, radius, temperature, luminosity). In this study we add a benchmark EB to the pre-main-sequence population with our characterization of TOI 450 (TIC 77951245). Using Gaia astrometry to identify its comoving, coeval companions, we confirm TOI 450 is a member of the 40 Myr Columba association. This eccentric (), equal-mass () system provides only one grazing eclipse. Despite this, our analysis achieves the precision of a double-eclipsing system by leveraging information in our high-resolution spectra to place priors on the surface-brightness and radius ratios. We also introduce a framework to include the effect of star spots on the observed eclipse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
