Non-conservative evolution in Algols: where is the matter?
Romain Deschamps, Kilian Braun, Alain Jorissen, Lionel Siess, Marteen, Baes, Peter Camps

TL;DR
This study investigates non-conservative mass loss in Algol systems, analyzing the effects of outflowing gas and dust on their spectral energy distribution, and searches for observational signatures like infrared excesses.
Contribution
It combines advanced binary evolution models with radiative transfer simulations to identify potential observational signatures of systemic mass loss in Algols.
Findings
Outflowing gas reduces optical and UV flux in the SED.
Dust presence causes infrared excesses detectable in surveys.
Some Algols and binary B[e] stars show predicted infrared signatures.
Abstract
There is gathering indirect evidence suggesting non-conservative evolutions in Algols. However, the systemic mass-loss rate is poorly constrained by observations and generally set as a free parameter in binary-star evolution simulations. Moreover, systemic mass loss may lead to observational signatures that are still to be found. We investigate the impact of the outflowing gas and the possible presence of dust grains on the spectral energy distribution (SED). We used the 1D plasma code Cloudy and compared the results with the 3D Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code Skirt for dusty simulations. The circumbinary mass-distribution and binary parameters are computed with state-of-the-art binary calculations done with the Binstar evolution code. The outflowing material reduces the continuum flux-level of the stellar SED in the optical and UV. Due to the time-dependence of this effect, it may…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
