X-Shooting ULLYSES : Massive stars at low metallicity. VIII Stellar and wind parameters of newly revealed stripped stars in Be binaries

Open Access
Authors
  • V. Ramachandran
  • A.A.C. Sander
  • D. Pauli
  • J. Klencki
  • F. Backs
  • F. Tramper
  • M. Bernini-Peron
  • P. Crowther
  • W.-R. Hamann
  • R. Ignace
  • R. Kuiper
  • M.S. Oey
  • L.M. Oskinova
  • T. Shenar
  • H. Todt
  • J.S. Vink
  • L. Wang
  • A. Wofford
  • XShootU Collaboration
Publication date 12-2024
Journal Astronomy and Astrophysics
Article number A90
Volume | Issue number 692
Number of pages 26
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
On the route toward merging neutron stars and stripped-envelope supernovae, binary population synthesis predicts a large number of post-interaction systems with massive stars that have been stripped of their outer layers. However, observations of such stars in the intermediate-mass regime below the Wolf-Rayet masses are rare. Using X-Shooting ULLYSES (XShootU) data, we have discovered three partially stripped star + Be/Oe binaries in the Magellanic Clouds. We analyzed the UV and optical spectra using the Potsdam Wolf-Rayet (PoWR) model atmosphere code by superimposing model spectra that correspond to each component. The estimated current masses of the partially stripped stars fall within the intermediate-mass range of ≈4 − 8 M. These objects are found to be over-luminous for their corresponding stellar masses, which aligns with the luminosities during core He-burning. Their accompanying Be/Oe secondaries are found to have much higher masses than their stripped primaries (mass ratio ≳2). The surfaces of all three partially stripped stars exhibit clear indications of significant nitrogen enrichment as well as a depletion of carbon and oxygen. Furthermore, one of our sample stars shows signs of substantial helium enrichment. Our study provides the first comprehensive determination of the wind parameters of partially stripped stars in the intermediate-mass range. The wind mass-loss rates of these stars are estimated to be on the order of 10−7M yr−1, which is more than ten times higher than that of OB stars with the same luminosity. The current mass-loss recipes commonly employed in evolutionary models to characterize this phase are based on OB or WR mass-loss rates, and they significantly underestimate or overestimate the observed mass-loss rates of (partially) stripped stars by an order of magnitude. Binary evolution models suggest that the observed primaries had initial masses in the range of 12−17 M, and are potential candidates for stripped-envelope supernovae resulting in the formation of a neutron star. If these systems survive the explosion, they will likely evolve to become Be X-ray binaries and later double neutron stars.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202449665
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85211244539
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X-Shooting ULLYSES VIII (Final published version)
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