Confirming NGC 6231 as the parent cluster of the runaway high-mass X-ray binary HD 153919/4U 1700-37 with Gaia DR2
Vincent van der Meij, Difeng Guo, Lex Kaper, and Mathieu Renzo

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia DR2 data to confirm that the high-mass X-ray binary HD 153919/4U 1700-37 originated from NGC 6231, providing insights into its evolutionary history and the nature of its compact object.
Contribution
It demonstrates the origin of HD 153919/4U 1700-37 from NGC 6231 using Gaia data and constrains its evolutionary history and the nature of its compact object.
Findings
HD 153919/4U 1700-37 originates from NGC 6231
The system has a space velocity of 63 km/s
The progenitor's age at supernova was less than 3.0 Myr
Abstract
A significant fraction of the most massive stars move through space with a high velocity. One of the possible physical explanations is that a supernova in a compact binary system results in a high recoil velocity of the system. If the system remains bound, it can be subsequently observed as a spectroscopic binary (SB1), a high-mass X-ray binary, a compact binary, and finally a gravitational-wave event. If such a system is traced back to its parent cluster, binary evolution models can be tested in great detail. The Gaia proper motions and parallaxes are used to demonstrate that the high-mass X-ray binary HD153919/4U 1700-37 originates from NGC6231, the nucleus of the OB association Sco OB1. The O supergiant and its compact companion, of which the physical nature (a neutron star or a black hole) is unknown, move with a space velocity of 63 km/s with respect to NGC6231. The kinematical age…
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