LBV phenomenon and binarity: The environment of HR Car
A. Mehner, S. Janssens, C. Agliozzo, W.-J. de Wit, H. M. J. Boffin, D., Baade, J. Bodensteiner, J. H. Groh, L. Mahy, and F. P. A. Vogt

TL;DR
This study investigates the environment of the LBV star HR Car, revealing its stellar neighborhood, potential binary interactions, and episodic outflows, which shed light on its evolutionary status and mass-loss phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar environment analysis of HR Car using VLT/MUSE data, highlighting its association with a moving group and evidence of recurrent mass transfer events.
Findings
HR Car is part of a B-type star group in a spiral arm.
Presence of fast outflows and ejected bullets every ~400 years.
Limited nearby massive stars suggest a specific evolutionary scenario.
Abstract
Luminous blue variable stars (LBVs) are of great interest in massive-star evolution as they experience very high mass-loss episodes within short periods of time. HR Car is a famous member of this class in the Galaxy. It has a large circumstellar nebula and has also been confirmed as being in a binary system. One means of gaining information about the evolutionary status and physical nature of LBVs is studying their environments. We investigated the stellar content within ~100 pc of HR Car and also its circumstellar nebula. Very Large Telescope (VLT) Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) observations of a 2'x2' region around the star highlight the incompleteness of stellar classification for stars with magnitudes of V > 13 mag. Eight B0 to B9 stars have been identified which may lie in close spatial vicinity to HR Car. For a region with a radius of r =1.2 degree (~100 pc at a distance…
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