On the origin of close massive binaries in the M17 star-forming region
E. Bordier, A.J. Frost, H. Sana, M. Reggiani, A. M\'erand, A. Rainot,, M.C. Ram\'irez-Tannus, W.J. de Wit

TL;DR
This study uses VLTI/GRAVITY observations to investigate the multiplicity of young O stars in M17, revealing a high multiplicity fraction and suggesting migration as a formation mechanism for close massive binaries.
Contribution
First interferometric survey of young O stars in M17, providing new insights into their multiplicity and possible formation scenarios.
Findings
All six stars are in multiple systems with 9 companions detected.
Multiplicity fraction is 100% with a companion fraction of 2.3±0.6.
Masses of companions range from 2.5 to 50 solar masses.
Abstract
Spectroscopic multiplicity surveys of O stars in young clusters and OB associations have revealed that a large portion ( 70%) of these massive stars (M 15 ) belong to close and short-period binaries (physical separation d few au). Despite the recent and significant progress, the formation mechanisms leading to such close massive multiple systems remain to be elucidated. As a result, young massive close binaries (or higher-order multiple systems) are unique laboratories to figure out the pairing mechanism of high-mass stars. We present the first VLTI/GRAVITY observations of six young O stars in the M17 star-forming region ( 1 Myr) and two additional foreground stars. From the interferometric model fitting of visibility amplitudes and closure phases, we search for companions and measure their positions and flux ratios. Combining the resulting…
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