Discovery of a new Wolf-Rayet star and a candidate star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud with Spitzer
V.V. Gvaramadze, A.-N. Chene, A.Y. Kniazev, O. Schnurr, T. Shenar, A., Sander, R. Hainich, N. Langer, W.-R. Hamann, Y.-H. Chu, R.A. Gruendl

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a Wolf-Rayet star in the Large Magellanic Cloud, its binary nature, and associated nebula, providing new insights into massive star evolution and star cluster membership.
Contribution
First discovery of a Wolf-Rayet star in the LMC via Spitzer, detailed spectroscopic analysis, and identification of a candidate star cluster.
Findings
Identified a WN3 Wolf-Rayet star with a binary companion.
Detected a high-excitation nebula photoionized by the WR star.
Suggested the star and nebula are part of a previously unrecognized star cluster.
Abstract
We report the first-ever discovery of a Wolf-Rayet (WR) star in the Large Magellanic Cloud via detection of a circular shell with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Follow-up observations with Gemini-South resolved the central star of the shell into two components separated from each other by approx 2 arcsec (or approx 0.5 pc in projection). One of these components turns out to be a WN3 star with H and He lines both in emission and absorption (we named it BAT99 3a using the numbering system based on extending the Breysacher et al. catalogue). Spectroscopy of the second component showed that it is a B0 V star. Subsequent spectroscopic observations of BAT99 3a with the du Pont 2.5-m telescope and the Southern African Large Telescope revealed that it is a close, eccentric binary system, and that the absorption lines are associated with an O companion star. We analyzed the spectrum of the binary…
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