The sdB star KPD 0422+5421 was discovered to be a single-lined spectroscopic
binary with a period of P=0.0901795 +/- (3\times 10^{-7}) days (2 hours, 10
minutes). The U and B light curves display an ellipsoidal modulation with
amplitudes of about 0.02 magnitudes. The sdB star contributes nearly all of the
observed flux. This and the absence of any reflection effect suggest that the
unseen companion star is small (i.e. R_comp ~ 0.01 solar radii) and therefore
degenerate. We modeled the U and B light curves and derived i = 78.05 +/- 0.50
degrees and a mass ratio of q = M_comp/M_sdB = 0.87 +/- 0.15. The sdB star
fills 69% of its Roche lobe. These quantities may be combined with the mass
function of the companion (f(M) = 0.126 +/- 0.028 solar masses) to derive M_sdB
= 0.72 +/- 0.26 solar masses and M_comp = 0.62 +/- 0.18 solar masses. We used
model spectra to derive the effective temperature, surface gravity, and helium
abundance of the sdB star. We found T_eff = 25,000 +/- 1500K, log g = 5.4 +/-
0.1, and [He/H] = -1.0. With a period of 2 hours and 10 minutes, KPD 0422+5421
has one of the shortest known orbital periods of a detached binary. This system
is also one of only a few known binaries which contain a subdwarf B star and a
white dwarf. Thus KPD 0422+5421 represents a relatively unobserved, and
short-lived, stage of binary star evolution.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, to appear in MNRAS, LaTeX, uses mn.st