The Tarantula Massive Binary Monitoring: I. Observational campaign and OB-type spectroscopic binaries
L.A. Almeida, H. Sana, W. Taylor, R. Barb\'a, A. Bonanos, P. Crowther,, A. Damineli, A. de Koter, S.E. de Mink, C.J. Evans, M. Gieles, N.J. Grin, V., H\'enault-Brunet, N. Langer, D. Lennon, S. Lockwood, J. Ma\'iz Apell\'aniz,, A.F.J. Moffat, C. Neijssel, C. Norman

TL;DR
This study presents the first extensive observational campaign of massive binary stars in the 30 Doradus region, analyzing their orbital parameters and binary fraction to compare with Galactic samples and understand environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurements of orbital parameters for massive binaries outside the Milky Way, revealing similarities with Galactic populations and constraints on binary properties at sub-solar metallicities.
Findings
Orbital parameters are similar across 30 Dor and the Milky Way.
Orbital period distribution is slightly flatter in 30 Dor.
Shorter orbital periods are found in early spectral types.
Abstract
Massive binaries (MBs) play a crucial role in the Universe. Knowing the distributions of their orbital parameters (OPs) is important for a wide range of topics, from stellar feedback to binary evolution channels, from the distribution of supernova types to gravitational wave progenitors, yet, no direct measurements exist outside the Milky Way. The Tarantula Massive Binary Monitoring was designed to help fill this gap by obtaining multi-epoch radial velocity monitoring of 102 MBs in the 30 Dor. In this paper, we analyse 32 VLT/FLAMES observations of 93 O- and 7 B-type binaries. We performed a Fourier analysis and obtained orbital solutions for 82 systems: 51 single- and 31 double-lined spectroscopic binaries. Overall, the OPs and binary fraction are remarkably similar across the 30 Dor region and compared to existing Galactic samples (GSs). This indicates that within these domains…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
