A spectroscopic and kinematic survey of fast hot subdwarfs
S. Geier, U. Heber, A. Irrgang, M.Dorsch, A. Bastian, P. Neunteufel,, T. Kupfer, S. Bloemen, S. Kreuzer, L. M\"oller, M. Schindewolf, D. Schneider,, E. Ziegerer, I. Pelisoli, V. Schaffenroth, B.N. Barlow, R. Raddi, S.J. Geier,, N. Reindl, T. Rauch, P. Nemeth, B.T. G\"ansicke

TL;DR
This study conducted a spectroscopic and kinematic survey of fast hot subdwarfs to identify potential supernova Ia progenitors, finding most are likely old halo stars rather than ejected companions.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis combining spectroscopy and Gaia astrometry of 53 fast hot subdwarfs, assessing their origins and relation to supernova progenitors.
Findings
None of the stars are unbound to the Galaxy.
21 stars are potential SN Ia ejection candidates.
Most stars are consistent with an old Galactic halo population.
Abstract
Hot subdwarfs (sdO/B) are the stripped helium cores of red giants formed by binary interactions. Close hot subdwarf binaries with massive white dwarf companions have been proposed as possible progenitors of thermonuclear supernovae type Ia (SN Ia). If the supernova is triggered by stable mass transfer from the helium star, the companion should survive the explosion and should be accelerated to high velocities. The hypervelocity star US 708 is regarded as the prototype for such an ejected companion. To find more of those objects we conducted an extensive spectroscopic survey. Candidates for such fast stars have been selected from the spectroscopic database of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and several ground-based proper motion surveys. Follow-up spectroscopy has been obtained with several 4m- to 10m-class telescopes. Combining the results from quantitative spectroscopic analyses…
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