The spins of stripped B stars support magnetic internal angular momentum transport
C. Sch\"urmann, N. Langer, X. Xu, C. Wang

TL;DR
This study investigates the internal rotation of stripped B stars in binary systems, finding that magnetic angular momentum transport mechanisms explain their slow rotation, which supports models of magnetic internal angular momentum transfer.
Contribution
It demonstrates that magnetic angular momentum transport mechanisms are necessary to reproduce the observed slow rotation of stripped B stars, advancing understanding of stellar internal angular momentum evolution.
Findings
Magnetic angular momentum transport explains slow rotation in stripped B stars.
Pure hydrodynamic models cannot account for observed slow rotation.
Mass transfer in LB-1 was likely moderately non-conservative.
Abstract
In order to predict the spins of stellar remnants we need to understand the evolution of the internal rotation of stars, and to identify at which stage the rotation of the contracting cores of evolved stars decouples from their expanding envelopes. The donor stars of mass transferring binaries lose almost their entire envelope and may thus offer a direct view on their core rotation. After the mass transfer event they contract and fade rapidly, although they are well observable when caught in the short-lived B-star phase. The B-type primary of the galactic binary system LB-1, which was originally suggested to contain a massive black hole, is nicely explained as a stripped star accompanied by a fainter Be star. The narrow absorption lines in the primary's spectrum signify extremely slow rotation, atypical of B-type main-sequence stars. Here we investigate the evolution of mass donors in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
