Dynamical Mass Constraints on Low-Mass Pre-Main-Sequence Stellar Evolutionary Tracks: An Eclipsing Binary in Orion with a 1.0 M(solar) Primary and a 0.7 M(solar) Secondary
Abstract
We report the discovery of a double-lined, spectroscopic, eclipsing binary in the Orion star-forming region. We analyze the system spectroscopically and photometrically to empirically determine precise, distance-independent masses, radii, effective temperatures, and luminosities for both components. The measured masses for the primary and secondary, accurate to approx. 1%, are 1.01 and 0.73 M(solar), respectively; thus, the primary is a definitive pre-main-sequence solar analog, and the secondary is the lowest-mass star yet discovered among pre-main-sequence eclispsing binary systems. We use these fundamental measurements to test the predictions of per-main-sequence stellar evolutionary tracks. None of the models we examined correctly predict the masses of the two components simultaneously, and we implicate differences between the theoretical and empirical effective temperature scales for this failing. All of the models predict the observed slope of the mass-radius relationship reasonably well, though the observations tend to favor models with low convection efficiencies. Indeed considering our newly determined mass measurements together with other dynamical mass measurements of pre-main-sequence stars in the literature, as ell as measurements of Li abundances in these stars, we show that the data strongly favor evolutionary models with inefficient convection in the stellar interior, even though such models cannot reproduce the properties of the present-day Sun.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Apr 01, 2004
- Accession Number
- ADA423559
Entities
People
- Frederick J. Vrba
- Keivan G. Stassun
- Luiz Paulo Vaz
- Nicholas Stroud
- Robert D. Mathieu
Organizations
- United States Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station