The 2.35 year itch of Cyg OB2 #9. II. Radio monitoring
R. Blomme, Y. Naze, D. Volpi, M. De Becker, R.K. Prinja, J.M. Pittard,, E.R. Parkin, O. Absil

TL;DR
This study presents radio monitoring of the massive binary Cyg OB2 #9 during its 2011 periastron, revealing flux variations, wind interactions, and updated orbital parameters through a combination of observations and modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed radio light curve analysis of Cyg OB2 #9's periastron passage and introduces a simple radiative transfer model to interpret the flux variations.
Findings
Radio flux drops to wind emission levels before periastron
The primary star has the stronger stellar wind contrary to expectations
Derived orbital period of approximately 860 days
Abstract
Cyg OB2 #9 is one of a small set of non-thermal radio emitting massive O-star binaries. The non-thermal radiation is due to synchrotron emission in the colliding-wind region. Cyg OB2 #9 was only recently discovered to be a binary system and a multi-wavelength campaign was organized to study its 2011 periastron passage. We report here on the results of the radio observations obtained in this monitoring campaign. We used the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) radio interferometer to obtain 6 and 20 cm continuum fluxes. The observed radio light curve shows a steep drop in flux sometime before periastron. The fluxes drop to a level that is comparable to the expected free-free emission from the stellar winds, suggesting that the non-thermal emitting region is completely hidden at that time. After periastron passage, the fluxes slowly increase. We introduce a simple model to solve the radiative…
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