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M-dwarf stars provide very favourable conditions to find habitable worlds beyond our solar system. The estimation of the fundamental parameters of the transiting exoplanets rely on the accuracy of the theoretical predictions for radius and effective temperature of the host M-dwarf, hence the importance of multiple empirical tests of very low-mass star (VLM) models, the theoretical counterpart of M-dwarfs. Recent determinations of mass, radius and effective temperature of a sample of M-dwarfs of known metallicity have disclosed a supposed discontinuity in the effective temperature-radius diagram corresponding to a stellar mass of about 0.2Mo, that has been ascribed to the transition from partially convective to fully convective stars. In this paper we compare existing VLM models to these observations, and find that theory does not predict any discontinuity at around 0.2Mo, rather a smooth change of slope of the effective temperature-radius relationship around this mass value. The appearance of a discontinuity 5is due to naively fitting the empirical data with linear segments. Also, its origin is unrelated to the transition to fully convective structures. We find that this feature is instead an empirical signature for the transition to a regime where electron degeneracy provides an important contribution to the stellar EOS, and constitutes an additional test of the consistency of the theoretical framework for VLM models.
We report the discovery of KELT J041621-620046, a moderately bright (J$sim$10.2) M dwarf eclipsing binary system at a distance of 39$pm$3 pc. KELT J041621-620046 was first identified as an eclipsing binary using observations from the Kilodegree Extre
Precise and accurate parameters for late-type (late K and M) dwarf stars are important for characterization of any orbiting planets, but such determinations have been hampered by these stars complex spectra and dissimilarity to the Sun. We exploit an
We report on 13 new high-precision measurements of stellar diameters for low-mass dwarfs obtained by means of near-infrared long-baseline interferometry with PIONIER at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. Together with accurate parallaxes from G
Rotation periods from Kepler K2 are combined with projected rotation velocities from the WIYN 3.5-m telescope, to determine projected radii for fast-rotating, low-mass ($0.15 leq M/M_{odot} leq 0.6$) members of the Praesepe cluster. A maximum likelih
The accuracy of theoretical mass, radius and effective temperature values for M-dwarf stars is an active topic of debate. Differences between observed and theoretical values have raised the possibility that current theoretical stellar structure and e