The first low-mass eclipsing binary within the fully convective zone from TMTS
Cheng Liu, Xiaofeng Wang, Xiaobing Zhang, Mikhail Kovalev, Jie Lin,, Gaobo Xi, Jun Mo, Gaici Li, Haowei Peng, Xin Li, Qiqi Xia, Abdusamatjan, Iskandar, Xiangyun Zeng, Letian Wang, Liying Zhu, Xuan Song, Jincheng Guo,, Xiaojun Jiang, Shengyu Yan, Jicheng Zhang

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the first low-mass eclipsing binary within the fully convective zone, revealing enhanced magnetic activity and discrepancies with stellar models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of a fully convective low-mass eclipsing binary, including mass, radius, and temperature measurements, and discusses magnetic activity effects.
Findings
Binary consists of two late M dwarfs below the fully convective boundary.
The system shows strong magnetic activity indicated by Balmer lines and X-ray emission.
Measured radii and temperatures are below stellar evolution model predictions.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive photometric and spectroscopic analysis of the short-period (5.32 hours) and low-mass eclipsing binary TMTSJ0803 discovered by Tsinghua-Ma Huateng Telescope for Survey (TMTS). By fitting the light curves and radial velocity data with the Wilson--Devinney code, we find that the binary is composed of two late spotted active M dwarfs below the fully convective boundary. This is supported by the discovery of a significant Balmer emission lines in the LAMOST spectrum and prominent coronal X-ray emission. In comparison with the typical luminosity of rapidly rotating fully convective stars, the much brighter X-ray luminosity () suggests the stellar magnetic activity of fully convective stars could be enhanced in such a close binary system. Given the metallicity of [M/H] = 0.35 dex as inferred from the LAMOST spectrum,…
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