Luminous Blue Variables are Antisocial: Their Isolation Implies that they are Kicked Mass Gainers in Binary Evolution
Nathan Smith, Ryan Tombleson

TL;DR
This paper argues that luminous blue variables (LBVs) are primarily products of binary evolution, evidenced by their isolation from young clusters, challenging the traditional view of LBVs as transitional single stars.
Contribution
It introduces a binary evolution model for LBVs, suggesting they are mass gainers in binary systems rather than transitional massive stars.
Findings
LBVs are more isolated than O stars and WR stars.
LBVs are likely the late stage of massive blue stragglers.
Environmental trends of supernova subtypes are influenced by binarity and SN kicks.
Abstract
Based on their relatively isolated environments, we argue that LBVs must be primarily the product of binary evolution, challenging the traditional single-star view wherein LBVs mark a brief transition between massive O stars and Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars. If the latter were true, then LBVs should be concentrated in young clusters and found alongside main-sequence stars with similarly high inferred initial mass. This is decidedly not the case. Examining locations of LBVs compared to O stars in our Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds reveals that LBVs systematically avoid clusters of O stars, and many reside over 100 pc from any O star. In the LMC, LBVs are statistically much more isolated than O-type stars, and (perhaps most surprisingly) even more isolated than most WR stars. This makes it impossible for LBVs to be massive stars in transition to WR stars. Instead, we propose that massive stars…
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