Stellar properties of observed stars stripped in binaries in the Magellanic Clouds
Y. Gotberg, M.R. Drout, A.P. Ji, J.H. Groh, B.A. Ludwig, P.A., Crowther, N. Smith, A. de Koter, S.E. de Mink

TL;DR
This study precisely characterizes ten stripped helium stars in the Magellanic Clouds, confirming their properties align with binary evolution models and providing new insights into their role as supernova progenitors.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis of observed stripped stars, validating binary evolution predictions and constraining their physical properties and wind characteristics.
Findings
Stars have high temperatures (~50-100kK) and surface gravities (~5)
Stellar winds are weaker than existing models predict
Properties suggest they are progenitors of type Ib and IIb supernovae
Abstract
Massive stars (~8-25Msun) stripped of their hydrogen-rich envelopes via binary interaction are thought to be the main progenitors for merging neutron stars and stripped-envelope supernovae. We recently presented the discovery of the first set of such stripped stars in a companion paper. Here, we fit the spectra of ten stars with new atmosphere models in order to constrain their stellar properties precisely. We find that the stellar properties align well with the theoretical expectations from binary evolution models for helium-core burning envelope-stripped stars. The fits confirm that the stars have high effective temperatures (Teff~50-100kK), high surface gravities (log g ~5), and hydrogen-poor/helium-rich surfaces (X(H, surf)~0-0.4) while showing for the first time a range of bolometric luminosities (10^3-10^5 Lsun), small radii (~0.5-1Rsun), and low Eddington factors…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
