研究目的
Investigating the eclipsing spotted giant star EPIC 211759736 to better constrain the stellar parameters and understand the rotational and long-term activity of the primary component.
研究成果
The study concludes that both the primary and secondary components of EPIC 211759736 deviate from the evolutionary tracks corresponding to their masses, appearing at lower masses than their true masses in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. This discrepancy is possibly due to strong magnetic fields, with greater differences observed in more active stars.
研究不足
The study is limited by the quality and quantity of ground-based observations, the rapid evolution of giant stars making it difficult to estimate stellar parameters, and the challenges in modeling starspots from photometric data alone.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
Combined K2 data with archival HATNet, ASAS, and DASCH photometry, new spectroscopic radial velocity measurements, and follow-up ground-based BVRC IC photometric observations to find binary system parameters and spot models.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
EPIC 211759736, an active spotted giant star in an eclipsing binary system observed during Kepler K2 Campaign
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Kepler spacecraft for K2 observations, Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph (TRES) for spectroscopic data,
4:5 m telescope of Baja Observatory for BVRC IC observations. Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Data reduction and photometric analysis performed using IRAF routines in a PyRAF environment.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Used multiple-frequency analysis tool MuFrAn for rotational periods, MCMC-based light curve emulator code Lightcurvefactory for binary modeling.
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