Is HR 6819 a triple system containing a black hole? -- An alternative explanation
J. Bodensteiner, T. Shenar, L. Mahy, M. Fabry, P. Marchant, M., Abdul-Masih, G. Banyard, D. M. Bowman, K. Dsilva, A. J. Frost, C. Hawcroft,, M. Reggiani, H. Sana

TL;DR
This study re-evaluates HR 6819, proposing it is a binary system with a stripped B-type star and a Be star, rather than a triple system containing a black hole, based on spectral analysis and evolutionary modeling.
Contribution
The paper provides a new interpretation of HR 6819 as a binary system with a stripped star, challenging the previous black hole hypothesis through spectral disentangling and evolutionary analysis.
Findings
Spectral disentangling shows the Be component is part of the binary, not a static tertiary.
Inferred masses suggest the primary is a stripped star, not a B-type giant.
Evolutionary models support a history of mass transfer in a close binary system.
Abstract
HR 6819 was recently proposed to be a triple system consisting of an inner B-type giant + black hole binary with an orbital period of 40d and an outer Be tertiary. This interpretation is mainly based on two inferences: that the emission attributed to the outer Be star is stationary, and that the inner star, which is used as mass calibrator for the black hole, is a B-type giant. We re-investigate the properties of HR 6819 by spectral disentangling and an atmosphere analysis of the disentangled spectra to search for a possibly simpler alternative explanation for HR 6819. Disentangling implies that the Be component is not a static tertiary, but rather a component of the binary in the 40-d orbit. The inferred radial velocity amplitudes imply an extreme mass ratio of M_2/M_1 = 15 +/- 3. We infer spectroscopic masses of 0.4 Msun and 6 Msun for the primary and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
