The High Angular Resolution Multiplicity of Massive Stars
Brian D. Mason, William I. Hartkopf, Douglas R. Gies, Todd J. Henry, and John W. Helsel

TL;DR
This study uses speckle interferometry to detect and analyze binary companions of massive stars, revealing higher binary frequencies in clusters and providing new orbital data for several systems.
Contribution
It expands previous surveys with new observations, statistical analysis of binary frequencies, and first or improved orbital solutions for specific massive star systems.
Findings
Binary frequency is higher in clusters than in the field.
Discovered companions to 14 OB stars.
Provided new orbital solutions for Delta Orionis, Iota Orionis, and Delta Scorpii.
Abstract
We present the results of a speckle interferometric survey of Galactic massive stars that complements and expands upon a similar survey made over a decade ago. The speckle observations were made with the KPNO and CTIO 4 m telescopes and USNO speckle camera, and they are sensitive to the detection of binaries in the angular separation regime between 0.03" and 5" with relatively bright companions (Delta V < 3). We report on the discovery of companions to 14 OB stars. In total we resolved companions of 41 of 385 O-stars (11%), 4 of 37 Wolf-Rayet stars (11%), and 89 of 139 B-stars (64%; an enriched visual binary sample that we selected for future orbital determinations). We made a statistical analysis of the binary frequency among the subsample that are listed in the Galactic O Star Catalog by compiling published data on other visual companions detected through adaptive optics studies…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Exploration and Technology
