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Detecting Stripped Stars While Searching for Quiescent Black Holes

Authors :
Bodensteiner, J.
Heida, M.
Abdul-Masih, M.
Baade, D.
Banyard, G.
Bowman, D. M.
Fabry, M.
Frost, A.
Mahy, L.
Marchant, P.
Mérand, A.
Reggiani, M.
Rivinius, Th.
Sana, H.
Selman, F.
Shenar, T.
Source :
The Messenger, 2022, vol. 186, p. 3-9
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

While the number of stellar-mass black holes detected in X-rays or as gravitational wave sources is steadily increasing, the known population remains orders of magnitude smaller than predicted by stellar evolution theory. A significant fraction of stellar-mass black holes is expected to hide in X-ray-quiet binaries where they are paired with a "normal" star. Although a handful of such quiescent black hole candidates have been proposed, the majority have been challenged by follow-up investigations. A confusion that emerged recently concerns binary systems that appear to contain a normal B-type star with an unseen companion, believed to be a black hole. On closer inspection, some of these seemingly normal B-type stars instead turn out to be stars stripped of most of their mass through an interaction with their binary companion, which in at least two cases is a rapidly rotating star rather than a compact object. These contaminants in the search for quiescent black holes are themselves extremely interesting objects as they represent a rare phase of binary evolution, and should be given special attention when searching for binaries hosting black holes in large spectroscopic studies.<br />Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
The Messenger, 2022, vol. 186, p. 3-9
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.00366
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.18727/0722-6691/5255