The IACOB project VIII. Searching for empirical signatures of binarity in fast-rotating O-type stars
N. Britavskiy, S. Sim\'on-D\'iaz, G. Holgado, S. Burssens, J. Ma\'iz, Apell\'aniz, J.J. Eldridge, Y. Naz\'e, M. Pantaleoni Gonz\'alez, A. Herrero

TL;DR
This study investigates the role of binary interactions in the formation of fast-rotating O-type stars by analyzing spectroscopic, Gaia, and TESS data, finding a significant link between binarity, runaway status, and high rotation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive empirical analysis showing that most fast-rotating O-type stars are likely post-interaction binary products, with detailed binary and runaway star fractions.
Findings
Fast rotators have a lower binary detection rate than slow rotators.
A higher fraction of fast rotators are runaway stars.
Most fast-rotating stars are likely post-interaction binary remnants.
Abstract
The empirical distribution of projected rotational velocities (vsini) in massive O-type stars is characterized by a dominant slow velocity component and a tail of fast rotators. Binary interaction has been proposed to play a dominant role in the formation of this tail. We perform a complete and homogeneous search for empirical signatures of binarity in a sample of 54 fast-rotating stars with the aim of evaluating this hypothesis. This working sample has been extracted from a larger sample of 415 Galactic O-type stars which covers the full range of vsini values. We use new and archival multi-epoch spectra in order to detect spectroscopic binary systems. We complement this information with Gaia proper motions and TESS photometric data to aid in the identification of runaway stars and eclipsing binaries, respectively. The identified fraction of single-lined spectroscopic binary (SB1)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
