2022
DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ac5aa5
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Analysis of Five Double-lined Spectroscopic Eclipsing Binaries Observed with TESS and LAMOST

Abstract: Based on analysis of high-precision photometry from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite combining with spectroscopy from the medium-resolution spectra of the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope, we investigated five double-lined spectroscopic eclipsing binaries (TIC 0165626871, TIC 0159105847, TIC 0122446076, TIC 0349294422, and TIC 0155968973). With the help of Wilson–Devinney program, we accurately derived their absolute stellar parameters. TIC 0165626871, TIC 0159105847, and TIC … Show more

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“…The secondary eclipse minimum of Star #27 (TIC 142 979 644; 1RXS J120656.2+700754) deviates from the phase 0.5 in Figure 6, so it has an eccentricity. We used formulae 1 and 2 in Lei et al (2022) to calculate its eccentricity (e) and periastron angle (ω). From our calculation, its secondary eclipse phase f 2 = 0.518 (its primary eclipse phase f 1 = 0), and the widths of the primary and secondary eclipses were determined by eye, which are w 1 ∼ 0.0176 and w 2 ∼ 0.018, respectively.…”
Section: Binary and Multiple Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The secondary eclipse minimum of Star #27 (TIC 142 979 644; 1RXS J120656.2+700754) deviates from the phase 0.5 in Figure 6, so it has an eccentricity. We used formulae 1 and 2 in Lei et al (2022) to calculate its eccentricity (e) and periastron angle (ω). From our calculation, its secondary eclipse phase f 2 = 0.518 (its primary eclipse phase f 1 = 0), and the widths of the primary and secondary eclipses were determined by eye, which are w 1 ∼ 0.0176 and w 2 ∼ 0.018, respectively.…”
Section: Binary and Multiple Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%