Clues about the scarcity of stripped-envelope stars from the evolutionary state of the sdO+Be binary system phi Persei
A. Schootemeijer, Y. Gotberg, S. E. de Mink, D. R. Gies, E. Zapartas

TL;DR
This study reanalyzes the phi Persei binary system, providing insights into the evolutionary state of its stripped-envelope star and suggesting that many such stars may be undetected due to observational biases.
Contribution
It offers a detailed Bayesian analysis of phi Persei, revealing the star's late helium shell burning phase and proposing a larger, hidden population of SESs.
Findings
The system evolved through near-conservative mass transfer.
The subdwarf is in a late helium shell burning phase.
Up to 50 less evolved subdwarfs may exist per similar system.
Abstract
Stripped-envelope stars (SESs) form in binary systems after losing mass through Roche-lobe overflow. They bear astrophysical significance as sources of UV and ionizing radiation in older stellar populations and, if sufficiently massive, as stripped supernova progenitors. Binary evolutionary models predict them to be common, but only a handful of subdwarfs (i.e., SESs) with B-type companions are known. This could be the result of observational biases hindering detection, or an incorrect understanding of binary evolution. We reanalyze the well-studied post-interaction binary phi Persei. Recently, new data improved the orbital solution of the system, which contains a ~1.2 Msun SES and a rapidly rotating ~9.6 Msun Be star. We compare with an extensive grid of evolutionary models using a Bayesian approach and find initial masses of the progenitor of 7.2+/-0.4 Msun for the SES and 3.8+/-0.4…
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