Luminous blue variables: An imaging perspective on their binarity and near environment
Christophe Martayan (ESO-Chile), Alex Lobel, Dietrich Baade (ESO-HQ),, Andrea Mehner (ESO-Chile), Thomas Rivinius (ESO-Chile), H. M. J. Boffin, (ESO-Chile), Julien Girard (ESO-Chile), Dimitri Mawet (CALTECH), Guillaume, Montagnier (ESO-Chile), Ronny Blomme

TL;DR
This study uses infrared imaging to explore the environments and binarity of luminous blue variables, revealing potential companions and circumstellar structures, which could shed light on their formation and eruption mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first direct imaging evidence of companions around LBV stars and investigates their circumstellar environments using multi-wavelength infrared observations.
Findings
Two LBVs may have wide orbit companions.
Most LBVs show large circumstellar envelopes or shells.
Direct imaging of LBV companions was achieved for the first time.
Abstract
Context. Luminous blue variables (LBVs) are rare massive stars with very high luminosity. They are characterized by strong photo-metric and spectroscopic variability related to transient eruptions. The mechanisms at the origin of these eruptions is not well known. In addition, their formation is still problematic and the presence of a companion could help to explain how they form. Aims. This article presents a study of seven LBVs (about 20% of the known Galactic population), some Wolf-Rayet stars, and massive binaries. We probe the environments that surround these massive stars with near-, mid-, and far-infrared images, investigating potential nebula/shells and the companion stars. Methods. To investigate large spatial scales, we used seeing-limited and near diffraction-limited adaptive optics images to obtain a differential diagnostic on the presence of circumstellar matter and to…
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