4.7 Article

THE CLOSE BINARY PROPERTIES OF MASSIVE STARS IN THE MILKY WAY AND LOW-METALLICITY MAGELLANIC CLOUDS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 778, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/778/2/95

Keywords

binaries: close; binaries: eclipsing; binaries: spectroscopic; galaxies: stellar content; Magellanic Clouds; stars: early-type; stars: statistics

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-1211843]
  2. NASA [NNX12AE39G]
  3. NASA [53417, NNX12AE39G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  5. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [1211843] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In order to understand the rates and properties of Type Ia and Type Ib/c supernovae, X-ray binaries, gravitational wave sources, and gamma-ray bursts as a function of galactic environment and cosmic age, it is imperative that we measure how the close binary properties of O- and B-type stars vary with metallicity. We have studied eclipsing binaries with early B main-sequence primaries in three galaxies with different metallicities: the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC, respectively) and the Milky Way (MW). The observed fractions of early B stars that exhibit deep eclipses 0.25 < Delta m (mag) < 0.65 and orbital periods 2 < P (days) < 20 in the MW, LMC, and SMC span a narrow range of (0.7-1.0)%, which is a model-independent result. After correcting for geometrical selection effects and incompleteness toward low-mass companions, we find for early B stars in all three environments (1) a close binary fraction of (22 +/- 5)% across orbital periods 2 < P (days) < 20 and mass ratios q = M-2/M-1 > 0.1, (2) an intrinsic orbital period distribution slightly skewed toward shorter periods relative to a distribution that is uniform in log P, (3) a mass-ratio distribution weighted toward low-mass companions, and (4) a small, nearly negligible excess fraction of twins with q > 0.9. Our fitted parameters derived for the MW eclipsing binaries match the properties inferred from nearby, early-type spectroscopic binaries, which further validates our results. There are no statistically significant trends with metallicity, demonstrating that the close binary properties of massive stars do not vary across metallicities -0.7 < log(Z/Z(circle dot)) < 0.0 beyond the measured uncertainties.

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