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The evolutionary status of Be stars: Results from a photometric study of southern open clusters

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 161, Issue 1, Pages 118-146

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/432757

Keywords

open clusters and associations : individual (Basel 1, Bochum 13, Collinder 272, Haffner 16, Hogg 16, Hogg 22, IC 2395, IC 2581, IC 2944, NGC 2343, NGC 2362, NGC 2367, NGC 2383, NGC 2384, NGC 2414, NGC 2421, NGC 2439, NGC 2483, NGC 2489, NGC 2571, NGC 2659, NGC 3293, NGC 3766, NGC 4103, NGC 4755, NGC 5281, NGC 5593, NGC 6178, NGC 6193, NGC 6200, NGC 6204, NGC 6231, NGC 6249, NGC 6250, NGC 6268, NGC 6322, NGC 6425, NGC 6530, NGC 6531, NGC 6604, NGC 6613, NGC 6664, Ruprecht 79, Ruprecht 119, Ruprecht 127, Ruprecht 140, Stock 13, Stock 14, Trumpler 7, Trumpler 18, Trumpler 20, Trumpler 27, Trumpler 28, Trumpler 34, vdB- Hagen 217); stars : emission- line, Be

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Be stars are a class of rapidly rotating B stars with circumstellar disks that cause Balmer and other line emission. There are three possible reasons for the rapid rotation of Be stars: they may have been born as rapid rotators, spun up by binary mass transfer, or spun up during the main-sequence ( MS) evolution of B stars. To test the various formation scenarios, we have conducted a photometric survey of 55 open clusters in the southern sky. Of these, five clusters are probably not physically associated groups and our results for two other clusters are not reliable, but we identify 52 definite Be stars and an additional 129 Be candidates in the remaining clusters. We use our results to examine the age and evolutionary dependence of the Be phenomenon. We find an overall increase in the fraction of Be stars with age until 100 Myr, and Be stars are most common among the brightest, most massive B-type stars above the zero-age main sequence (ZAMS). We show that a spin-up phase at the terminal-age main sequence (TAMS) cannot produce the observed distribution of Be stars, but up to 73% of the Be stars detected may have been spun-up by binary mass transfer. Most of the remaining Be stars were likely rapid rotators at birth. Previous studies have suggested that low metallicity and high cluster density may also favor Be star formation. Our results indicate a possible increase in the fraction of Be stars with increasing cluster distance from the Galactic center ( in environments of decreasing metallicity). However, the trend is not significant and could be ruled out due to the intrinsic scatter in our data. We also find no relationship between the fraction of Be stars and cluster density.

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