Unicorns and Giraffes in the binary zoo: stripped giants with subgiant companions
Kareem El-Badry, Rhys Seeburger, Tharindu Jayasinghe, Hans-Walter Rix,, Silvia Almada, Charlie Conroy, Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Kevin Burdge

TL;DR
This study examines two binary systems with giant stars and luminous companions, revealing they are not black holes but evolved stars, providing insights into a rare phase of binary evolution leading to white dwarf formation.
Contribution
The paper presents detailed spectral and photometric analysis of two giant binary systems, challenging previous black hole interpretations and illustrating a key evolutionary phase.
Findings
Both systems contain luminous, evolved companions rather than black holes.
Primaries are low-mass, Roche-lobe filling giants with signs of CNO processing.
Binary evolution models explain the observed properties through envelope stripping.
Abstract
We analyze two binary systems containing giant stars, V723 Mon ("the Unicorn") and 2M04123153+6738486 ("the Giraffe"). Both giants orbit more massive but less luminous companions, previously proposed to be mass-gap black holes. Spectral disentangling reveals luminous companions with star-like spectra in both systems. Joint modeling of the spectra, light curves, and spectral energy distributions robustly constrains the masses, temperatures, and radii of both components: the primaries are luminous, cool giants ( and , and ) with exceptionally low masses () that likely fill their Roche lobes. The secondaries are only slightly warmer subgiants ( and , and ) and thus are…
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