Massive runaway stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud
V.V. Gvaramadze, P. Kroupa, J. Pflamm-Altenburg

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of massive field stars in the LMC by detecting bow shocks to identify runaway stars ejected from clusters, providing new insights into their dynamic history.
Contribution
We present the first detection of bow shocks in the LMC and demonstrate their use in tracing the origins of massive runaway stars.
Findings
Detected a bow shock around star BI 237, indicating it is a runaway star.
Identified bow shocks around four OB stars, suggesting ejection from star-forming regions.
Bow shock geometry points to ejection from LH 82 and 30 Doradus regions.
Abstract
The origin of massive field stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) has long been an enigma. The recent measurements of large offsets (~100 km/s) between the heliocentric radial velocities of some very massive (O2-type) field stars and the systemic LMC velocity provides a possible explanation of this enigma and suggests that the field stars are runaway stars ejected from their birth places at the very beginning of their parent cluster's dynamical evolution. A straightforward way to prove this explanation is to measure the proper motions of the field stars and to show that they are moving away from one of the nearby star clusters or OB associations. This approach however is complicated by the large distance to the LMC, which makes accurate proper motion measurements difficult. We use an alternative approach for solving the problem, based on the search for bow shocks produced by runaway…
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