X-ray emission from the double-binary OB-star system QZ Car (HD 93206)
E. R. Parkin, P. S. Broos, L. K. Townsley, J. M. Pittard, A. F. J., Moffat, Y. Naze, G. Rauw, L. M. Oskinova, W. L. Waldron

TL;DR
This study analyzes two years of Chandra X-ray data of the double-binary OB-star system QZ Car, revealing complex plasma components and suggesting mass transfer influences on X-ray emission, with implications for wind interactions and stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral modeling and semi-analytical analysis of QZ Car, highlighting the role of mass transfer and wind-wind collisions in X-ray emission, which is a novel insight for such systems.
Findings
X-ray spectra fit by a three-temperature plasma model
No clear correlation between X-ray flux and binary orbits
Mass transfer likely affects wind interactions and X-ray emission
Abstract
X-ray observations of the double-binary OB-star system QZ Car (HD 93206) obtained with the Chandra X-ray Observatory over a period of roughly 2 years are presented. The orbit of systems A (O9.7 I+b2 v, PA = 21 d) and B (O8 III+o9 v, PB = 6 d) are reasonably well sampled by the observations, allowing the origin of the X-ray emission to be examined in detail. The X-ray spectra can be well fitted by an attenuated three temperature thermal plasma model, characterised by cool, moderate, and hot plasma components at kT ~ 0.2, 0.7, and 2 keV, respectively, and a circumstellar absorption of ~ 0.2 x 10^22 cm-2. Although the hot plasma component could be indicating the presence of wind-wind collision shocks in the system, the model fluxes calculated from spectral fits, with an average value of ~ 7 x 10^-13 erg s-1 cm-2, do not show a clear correlation with the orbits of the two constituent…
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