The Tarantula Massive Binary Monitoring project: II. A first SB2 orbital and spectroscopic analysis for the Wolf-Rayet binary R145
T. Shenar, N. D. Richardson, D. P. Sablowski, R. Hainich, H. Sana, A., F. J. Moffat, H. Todt, W.-R. Hamann, L. M. Oskinova, A. Sander, F. Tramper,, N. Langer, A. Z. Bonanos, S. E. de Mink, G. Graefener, P. A. Crowther, J. S., Vink, L. A. Almeida, A. de Koter, R. Barba

TL;DR
This study presents the first spectroscopic orbital solution for the Wolf-Rayet binary R145, revealing component masses around 54 solar masses and challenging previous claims of an extremely massive primary exceeding 300 solar masses.
Contribution
It provides the first SB2 orbital and spectroscopic analysis of R145, including orbital parameters, spectral disentanglement, and mass estimates, refining the understanding of its stellar components.
Findings
Derived orbital parameters including high eccentricity (e=0.78)
Estimated component masses around 54 Msun each
Excluded the primary being over 300 Msun
Abstract
We present the first SB2 orbital solution and disentanglement of the massive Wolf-Rayet binary R145 (P = 159d) located in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The primary was claimed to have a stellar mass greater than 300Msun, making it a candidate for the most massive star known. While the primary is a known late type, H-rich Wolf-Rayet star (WN6h), the secondary could not be so far unambiguously detected. Using moderate resolution spectra, we are able to derive accurate radial velocities for both components. By performing simultaneous orbital and polarimetric analyses, we derive the complete set of orbital parameters, including the inclination. The spectra are disentangled and spectroscopically analyzed, and an analysis of the wind-wind collision zone is conducted. The disentangled spectra and our models are consistent with a WN6h type for the primary, and suggest that the secondary is an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
