Subdwarf B stars from the common envelope ejection channel
H. Xiong, X. Chen, P. Podsiadlowski, Y. Li, Z. Han

TL;DR
This study uses MESA simulations to explore how the common envelope ejection channel produces subdwarf B stars, revealing two distinct groups with different properties influenced by internal convection during helium flashes.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes sdB formation via the CE ejection channel, identifying the factors leading to two different sdB populations and their observational implications.
Findings
Two distinct sdB groups on the temperature-gravity diagram.
Convection development during helium flash determines sdB properties.
Flash mixing is rare in CE ejection products due to fallback processes.
Abstract
From the canonical binary scenario, the majority of sdBs are produced from low-mass stars with degenerate cores where helium is ignited in a way of flashes. Due to numerical difficulties, the models of produced sdBs are generally constructed from more massive stars with non-degenerate cores, leaving several uncertainties on the exact characteristics of sdB stars. Employing MESA, we systematically studied the characteristics of sdBs produced from the common envelope (CE) ejection channel, and found that the sdB stars produced from the CE ejection channel appear to form two distinct groups on the effective temperature-gravity diagram. One group (the flash-mixing model) almost has no H-rich envelope and crows at the hottest temperature end of the extremely horizontal branch (EHB), while the other group has significant H-rich envelope and spreads over the whole canonical EHB region. The key…
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