IR nebulae around bright massive stars as indicators for binary interactions
Julia Bodensteiner, Dietrich Baade, Jochen Greiner, Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This study investigates infrared nebulae around early-type stars, finding that a significant portion may be linked to binary interactions and mass transfer, revealing new insights into stellar evolution processes.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale visual inspection linking IR nebulae around early-type stars to binary evolution mechanisms.
Findings
28% of O stars have IR nebulae
13% of centered nebulae may be bow shocks
Approximately 29% of IR nebulae relate to binary evolution
Abstract
Recent studies show that more than 70% of massive stars do not evolve as effectively single stars, but as members of interacting binary systems. The evolution of these stars is thus strongly altered compared to similar but isolated objects. We investigate the occurrence of parsec-scale mid-infrared nebulae around early-type stars. If they exist over a wide range of stellar properties, one possible overarching explanation is non-conservative mass transfer in binary interactions, or stellar mergers. For ~3850 stars (all OBA stars in the Bright Star Catalogue [BSC], Be stars, BeXRBs, and Be+sdO systems), we visually inspect WISE 22 m images. Based on nebular shape and relative position, we distinguish five categories: offset bow shocks structurally aligned with the stellar space velocity, unaligned offset bow shocks, and centered, unresolved, and not classified nebulae. In the BSC, we…
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