Resolving the dynamical mass tension of the massive binary 9 Sagittarii
M. Fabry (1), C. Hawcroft (1), A. J. Frost (1), L. Mahy (2, 1), P., Marchant (1), J-B. Le Bouquin (3), H. Sana (1) ((1) Institute of Astronomy,, Leuven, Belgium, (2) Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium, (3), Institute of Planetology, Astrophysics, Grenoble, France)

TL;DR
This study resolves the mass discrepancy in the massive binary 9 Sgr by combining interferometric and spectroscopic data, providing precise stellar masses and insights into internal mixing processes.
Contribution
It offers the first consistent dynamical mass measurement for 9 Sgr, clarifies previous mass-inclination tension, and highlights enhanced internal mixing in massive stars.
Findings
Primary mass approximately 53 M⊙
Secondary mass approximately 39 M⊙
Detection of CNO-processed material on the primary
Abstract
Direct dynamical mass measurements of stars with masses above 30 M are rare. This is the result of the low yield of the upper initial mass function and the limited number of such systems in eclipsing binaries. Long-period, double-lined spectroscopic binaries that are also resolved astrometrically offer an alternative for obtaining absolute masses of stellar objects. 9 Sgr is one such long-period, high-mass binary. Unfortunately, a large amount of tension exists between its total dynamical mass inferred from radial velocity measurements and that from astrometric data. We obtained the astrometric orbit from VLTI/PIONIER and VLTI/GRAVITY interferometric measurements. Using archival and new spectroscopy, we performed a grid-based spectral disentangling search to constrain the semi-amplitudes of the radial velocity curves. We computed atmospheric parameters and surface abundances…
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