A detailed non-LTE analysis of LB-1: Revised parameters and surface abundances
S. Sim\'on-D\'iaz, J. Ma\'iz Apell\'aniz, D.J. Lennon, J.I. Gonz\'alez, Hern\'andez, C. Allende Prieto, N. Castro, A. de Burgos, P. L. Dufton, A., Herrero, B. Toledo-Padr\'on, S. J. Smartt

TL;DR
This study uses non-LTE spectral analysis to revise the parameters and surface abundances of LB-1's B star, suggesting it is a low-mass evolved star, which impacts the inferred mass of its black hole companion.
Contribution
It provides a detailed non-LTE analysis of LB-1's B star, revising its parameters and surface abundances, and challenges previous assumptions about the system's black hole mass.
Findings
The B star has Teff ~14000 K and logg ~3.50.
Surface abundances show nitrogen and iron enhancement, and carbon depletion.
The star's mass is estimated at 3-5 Msol, implying a lower black hole mass.
Abstract
LB-1 has recently been proposed to be a binary system at 4 kpc consisting of a B star of 8 Msol and a massive stellar black hole of 70 Msol. This finding challenges our current theories of massive star evolution and formation of BHs at solar metallicity. Our objective is to derive the effective temperature, surface gravity and chemical composition of the B-type component in order to determine its nature and evolutionary status and, indirectly, to constrain the mass of the BH. We use the non-LTE stellar atmosphere code FASTWIND to analyse new and archival high resolution data. We determine (Teff, logg) values of (14000 K, 3.50 dex) that, combined with the Gaia parallax, implies a spectroscopic mass, from logg, of Msol and an evolutionary mass, assuming single star evolution, of Msol. We determine an upper limit of 8 km/s for…
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