A closer look at the binary content of NGC 1850
S. Saracino, S. Kamann, N. Bastian, M. Gieles, T. Shenar, N. Reindl,, J. M\"uller-Horn, C. Usher, S. Dreizler, V. H\'enault-Brunet

TL;DR
This study characterizes the binary star population in the 100-million-year-old cluster NGC 1850, revealing a 24% binary fraction, a mass-dependent trend, and identifying potential black hole candidates, thus enhancing understanding of stellar multiplicity.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of binary stars in an intermediate-age cluster, using multi-epoch spectroscopy to determine binary fraction and orbital properties down to 2.5 solar masses.
Findings
Binary fraction of 24% in NGC 1850
Higher binary fractions in more massive stars
Identification of potential black hole candidate binary
Abstract
Studies of young clusters have shown that a large fraction of O-/early B-type stars are in binary systems, where the binary fraction increases with mass. These massive stars are present in clusters of a few Myrs, but gradually disappear for older clusters. The lack of detailed studies of intermediate-age clusters has meant that almost no information is available on the multiplicity properties of stars with M 4 . In this study we present the first characterization of the binary content of NGC 1850, a 100 Myr-old massive star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud, relying on a VLT/MUSE multi-epoch spectroscopic campaign. By sampling stars down to M = 2.5 , we derive a close binary fraction of 24 5 \% in NGC 1850, in good agreement with the multiplicity frequency predicted for stars of this mass range. We also find a trend with stellar mass (magnitude), with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
