A New Class of Nascent Eclipsing Binaries with Extreme Mass Ratios
Oct 29, 201424 pages
Published in:
- Astrophys.J. 801 (2015) 2, 113
- Published: Mar 12, 2015
e-Print:
- 1410.8138 [astro-ph.SR]
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Abstract: (IOP)
Early B-type main-sequence (MS) stars (M (1) ≈ 5-16 M (☉)) with closely orbiting low-mass stellar companions (q = M (2)/M (1) < 0.25) can evolve to produce Type Ia supernovae, low-mass X-ray binaries, and millisecond pulsars. However, the formation mechanism and intrinsic frequency of such close extreme mass-ratio binaries have been debated, especially considering none have hitherto been detected. Utilizing observations of the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy conducted by the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, we have discovered a new class of eclipsing binaries in which a luminous B-type MS star irradiates a closely orbiting low-mass pre-MS companion that has not yet fully formed. The primordial pre-MS companions have large radii and discernibly reflect much of the light they intercept from the B-type MS primaries (ΔI (refl) ≈ 0.02-0.14 mag). For the 18 definitive MS + pre-MS eclipsing binaries in our sample with good model fits to the observed light-curves, we measure short orbital periods P = 3.0-8.5 days, young ages τ ≈ 0.6-8 Myr, and small secondary masses M (2) ≈ 0.8-2.4 M (☉) (q ≈ 0.07-0.36). The majority of these nascent eclipsing binaries are still associated with stellar nurseries, e.g., the system with the deepest eclipse ΔI (1) = 2.8 mag and youngest age τ = 0.6 ± 0.4 Myr is embedded in the bright H II region 30 Doradus. After correcting for selection effects, we find that (2.0 ± 0.6)% of B-type MS stars have companions with short orbital periods P = 3.0-8.5 days and extreme mass ratios q ≈ 0.06-0.25. This is ≈10 times greater than that observed for solar-type MS primaries. We discuss how these new eclipsing binaries provide invaluable insights, diagnostics, and challenges for the formation and evolution of stars, binaries, and H II regions.Note:
- 24 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables, submitted to ApJ
- binaries: close
- binaries: eclipsing
- H II regions
- stars: formation
- stars: massive
- stars: pre-main sequence
References(132)
Figures(12)