Abstract

Aim: Our purpose is to provide reliable stellar parameters for a significant sample of eclipsing binaries, which are representative of a whole dwarf and metal-poor galaxy. We also aim at providing a new estimate of the mean distance to the SMC and of its depth along the line of sight for the observed field of view. Method: We use radial velocity curves obtained with the ESO FLAMES facility at the VLT and light curves from the OGLE-II photometric survey. The radial velocities were obtained by least-squares fits of the observed spectra to synthetic ones, excluding the hydrogen Balmer lines. Results: Our sample contains 23 detached, 9 semi-detached and 1 overcontact systems. Most detached systems have properties consistent with stellar evolution calculations from single-star models at the standard SMC metallicity Z = 0.004, though they tend to be slightly overluminous. The few exceptions are probably due to third light contribution or insufficient signal-to-noise ratio. The mass ratios are consistent with a flat distribution, both for detached and semi-detached/contact binaries. A mass-luminosity relation valid from ~4 to ~18 Msol is derived. The uncertainties are in the +-2 to +-11% range for the masses, in the +-2 to +-5% range for the radii and in the +-1 to +-6% range for the effective temperatures. The average distance modulus is 19.11+-0.03 (66.4+-0.9 kpc). The moduli derived from the V and from the I data are consistent within 0.01 mag. The 2-sigma depth of the SMC is, for our field, of 0.25 mag or 7.6 kpc under the assumption of a gaussian distribution of stars along the line of sight. Three systems show significant apsidal motion, one of them with an apsidal period of 7.6 years, the shortest known to date for a detached system with main sequence stars.

Highlights

  • Since the late 1990s, the usefulness of extragalactic eclipsing binaries has been emphasized in a number of papers

  • For all but two binaries, the light curves come from the new version of the OGLE-II catalog of eclipsing binaries detected in the SMC (Wyrzykowski et al 2004)

  • The rms scatters of the light curves and radial velocity (RV) curves are summarized in Tables 16 and 17

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Summary

Introduction

Since the late 1990s, the usefulness of extragalactic eclipsing binaries has been emphasized in a number of papers. If one considers the SMC, the new OGLE-II catalog of EBs in the SMC (Wyrzykowski et al 2004) contains 1350 light curves, and currently only 50 of these systems have moderately reliable RV curves This paper reduces this imbalance a little by releasing the analysis of 28 more EB systems plus revised solutions for 5 systems previously described by HHH03 and HHH05. The RV measurements were derived from muti-object spectroscopic observations made with the VLT FLAMES facility Another strong motivation for increasing the number of fully resolved binaries is to settle the problem of the distribution of the mass ratio of detached binaries with early B primaries. The sample as a whole is discussed in relation with the SMC properties in Sect. 4, while the individual binary systems are described in the Appendix

Observations
Spectroscopic data reduction
Analysis
Photometry: quality check
Synthetic spectra
Radial velocities
First step: spectrum “disentangling”
Testing the robustness by simulations
Second step: least-squares RV determination
Simulations
Apsidal motion
First step
Second step
3.10. Effective temperatures
3.10.1. First step
3.10.2. Second step
3.11. Synthetic photometry and reddening
3.12. Distance modulus
3.13.1. Distance modulus and related parameters
3.13.2. Masses and radii
Results and discussion
Nebular emission and kinematics
Comparison with evolutionary models and the mass-luminosity relation
Color excess and extinction
Distance
Temperature scale and distance modulus
Conclusions
Full Text
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