Compact Object Candidates with K/M-dwarf Companions from LAMOST Low-resolution Survey
Hui-Jun Mu, Wei-Min Gu, Tuan Yi, Ling-Lin Zheng, Hao Sou, Zhong-Rui, Bai, Hao-Tong Zhang, Ya-Juan Lei, and Cheng-Ming Li

TL;DR
This study uses LAMOST low-resolution spectra to identify 35 candidate binary systems with K/M-dwarf stars that may host compact objects like black holes or neutron stars, demonstrating an efficient survey method.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to find compact object candidates using large-scale low-resolution spectroscopic data combined with photometry, expanding the search capabilities beyond high-resolution methods.
Findings
Identified 35 candidate systems with potential compact objects.
Confirmed compact objects in two systems via radial velocity fitting.
Showed the effectiveness of LAMOST data for compact object searches.
Abstract
Searching for compact objects (black holes, neutron stars, or white dwarfs) in the Milky Way is essential for understanding the stellar evolution history, the physics of compact objects, and the structure of our Galaxy. Compact objects in binaries with a luminous stellar companion are perfect targets for optical observations. Candidate compact objects can be achieved by monitoring the radial velocities of the companion star. However, most of the spectroscopic telescopes usually obtain stellar spectra at a relatively low efficiency, which makes a sky survey for millions of stars practically impossible. The efficiency of a large-scale spectroscopic survey, the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopy Telescope (LAMOST), presents a specific opportunity to search for compact object candidates, i.e., simply from the spectroscopic observations. Late-type K/M stars are the most abundant…
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