Spectrum of the secondary component and new orbital elements of the massive triple star Delta Ori A
A. Opli\v{s}tilov\'a, P. Mayer, P. Harmanec, M. Bro\v{z}, A. Pigulski,, H. Bo\v{z}i\'c, P. Zasche, M. \v{S}lechta, H. Pablo, P. A., Ko{\l}aczek-Szyma\'nski, A. F. J. Moffat, C. C. Lovekin, G. A. Wade, K., Zwintz, A. Popowicz, and W. W. Weiss

TL;DR
This study characterizes the orbital dynamics, component masses, and radiative properties of the massive triple star system Delta Ori A using spectroscopic, interferometric, and photometric data, revealing it as a pre-mass-transfer system.
Contribution
First detection of the secondary's spectral lines and new orbital constraints for the tertiary, refining the system's physical and orbital parameters with multi-method data integration.
Findings
Orbital period of the tertiary is 152 years.
Component masses are approximately 17.8, 8.5, and 8.7 solar masses.
Delta Ori A is a pre-mass-transfer system.
Abstract
Orionis is the closest massive multiple stellar system and one of the brightest members of the Orion OB association. The primary (Aa1) is a unique evolved O star. In this work, we applied a two-step disentangling method to a series of spectra in the blue region (430 to 450 nm), and we detected spectral lines of the secondary (Aa2). For the first time, we were able to constrain the orbit of the tertiary (Ab) - to 55 450 d or 152 yr - using variable velocities and new speckle interferometric measurements, which have been published in the Washington Double Star Catalogue. In addition, the Gaia DR3 parallax of the faint component (Ca+Cb) constrains the distance of the system to (381 8) pc, which is just in the centre of the Orion OB1b association, at (382 1) pc. Consequently, we found that the component masses according to the three-body model are 17.8, 8.5,…
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