EA-type eclipsing binaries observed by LAMOST Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Qian S.-B.
  2. Zhang J.
  3. He J.-J.
  4. Zhu L.-Y.
  5. Zhao E.-G.
  6. Shi X.-D.
  7. Zhou X.,Han Z.-T.
  8. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

About 3196 EA-type binaries (EAs) were observed by LAMOST by 2017 June 16 and their spectral types were derived. Meanwhile, the stellar atmospheric parameters of 2020 EAs were determined. In this paper, those EAs are cataloged and their physical properties and evolutionary states are investigated. The period distribution of EAs suggests that the period limit of tidal locking for the close binaries is about 6 days. It is found that the metallicity of EAs is higher than that of EW-type binaries (EWs), indicating that EAs are generally younger than EWs and they are the progenitors of EWs. The metallicities of long-period EWs (0.4<P<1 days) are the same as those of EAs with the same periods, while their values of Log (g) are usually smaller than those of EAs. These support the evolutionary process that EAs evolve into long-period EWs through the combination of angular momentum loss (AML) via magnetic braking and case A mass transfer. For short-period EWs, their metallicities are lower than those of EAs, while their gravitational accelerations are higher. These reveal that they may be formed from cool short-period EAs through AML via magnetic braking with little mass transfer. For some EWs with high metallicities, they may be contaminated by material from the evolution of unseen neutron stars and black holes or they have third bodies that may help them to form rapidly through a short timescale of pre-contact evolution. The present investigation suggests that the modern EW populations may have formed through a combination of these mechanisms.

Keywords
  1. eclipsing-binary-stars
  2. effective-temperature
  3. stellar-spectral-types
  4. metallicity
  5. radial-velocity
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2018ApJS..235....5Q
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IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/235/5
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.22350005

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History

2018-09-20T06:51:38Z
Resource record created
2018-09-20T06:51:38Z
Created
2021-02-23T07:34:54Z
Updated

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