Abstract
We present the discovery of CoRoT 223992193, a double-lined, detached eclipsing binary, comprising two pre-main sequence M dwarfs, discovered by the CoRoT space mission during a 23-day observation of the 3 Myr old NGC 2264 star-forming region. Using multi-epoch optical and near-IR follow-up spectroscopy with FLAMES on the Very Large Telescope and ISIS on the William Herschel Telescope we obtain a full orbital solution and derive the fundamental parameters of both stars by modelling the light curve and radial velocity data. The orbit is circular and has a period of $3.8745745 \pm 0.0000014$ days. The masses and radii of the two stars are $0.67 \pm 0.01$ and $0.495 \pm 0.007$ $M_{\odot}$ and $1.30 \pm 0.04$ and $1.11 ~^{+0.04}_{-0.05}$ $R_{\odot}$, respectively. This system is a useful test of evolutionary models of young low-mass stars, as it lies in a region of parameter space where observational constraints are scarce; comparison with these models indicates an apparent age of $\sim$3.5-6 Myr. The systemic velocity is within $1\sigma$ of the cluster value which, along with the presence of lithium absorption, strongly indicates cluster membership. The CoRoT light curve also contains large-amplitude, rapidly evolving out-of-eclipse variations, which are difficult to explain using starspots alone. The system's spectral energy distribution reveals a mid-infrared excess, which we model as thermal emission from a small amount of dust located in the inner cavity of a circumbinary disk. In turn, this opens up the possibility that some of the out-of-eclipse variability could be due to occultations of the central stars by material located at the inner edge or in the central cavity of the circumbinary disk.
Highlights
Detached, double-lined eclipsing binaries (EBs) are extremely valuable objects because their masses, radii, effective temperatures and luminosities can be determined in a model-independent manner from the light and radial velocity curves of the system
We present the discovery of CoRoT 223992193, a double-lined, detached eclipsing binary, comprising two pre-main sequence M dwarfs, discovered by the CoRoT space mission during a 23-day observation of the 3 Myr old NGC 2264 star-forming region
The system’s spectral energy distribution reveals a mid-infrared excess, which we model as thermal emission from a small amount of dust located in the inner cavity of a circumbinary disk
Summary
Double-lined eclipsing binaries (EBs) are extremely valuable objects because their masses, radii, effective temperatures and luminosities can be determined in a model-independent manner from the light and radial velocity curves of the system When these reach a precision of a few percent or less, they provide one of the most powerful tests of stellar evolution models available (Andersen 1991; Torres et al 2010). Testing stellar evolution models with EBs assumes that the stars can be considered to evolve independently This has been questioned for closeseparation binaries, which are spun up by tidal interactions, and are more magnetically active than single stars of comparable masses and ages: Chabrier et al (2007) studied the impact of this enhanced magnetic field on convective processes within low-mass stars, finding that it could explain the observed cool temperatures and large radii.
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