A radio-map of the colliding winds in the very massive binary system HD 93129A
Paula Benaglia, Benito Marcote, Javier Moldon, Ed Nelan, Michael De, Becker, Sean M. Dougherty, Baerbel Koribalski

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution radio imaging and astrometry to confirm that HD 93129A is a binary system with colliding stellar winds producing non-thermal radio emission, advancing understanding of particle acceleration in massive star systems.
Contribution
First spatially resolved radio images of HD 93129A reveal a colliding-wind region, confirming its binary nature and providing key constraints for models of non-thermal emission in massive binaries.
Findings
HD 93129A is a gravitationally bound binary system.
Resolved arc-shaped non-thermal emission indicative of a wind-collision region.
Estimated wind momentum-rate ratio between the two stars.
Abstract
Radio observations are an effective tool to discover particle acceleration regions in colliding-wind binaries, through detection of synchrotron radiation; these regions are natural laboratories for the study of relativistic particles. Wind-collision region (WCR) models can reproduce the radio continuum spectra of massive binaries that contain both thermal and non-thermal radio emission; however, key constraints for models come from high-resolution imaging. Only five WCRs have been resolved to date at radio frequencies at milliarcsec (mas) angular scales. The source HD 93129A, prototype of the very few known O2 I stars, is a promising target for study: recently, a second massive, early-type star about 50 mas away was discovered, and a non-thermal radio source detected in the region. Preliminary long-baseline array data suggest that a significant fraction of the radio emission from the…
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.
