Weighing The Options: The Unseen Companion in LAMOST J2354 is Likely a Massive White Dwarf
M. A. Tucker, A. J. Wheeler, D. M. Rowan, M. E. Huber

TL;DR
This study re-evaluates the unseen companion in LAMOST J2354, concluding it is more likely a massive white dwarf than a neutron star, based on detailed spectroscopic analysis and system evolution considerations.
Contribution
The paper provides new spectroscopic data and analysis that favor a white dwarf companion over a neutron star in the LAMOST J2354 system, challenging previous assumptions.
Findings
The companion's mass is refined to ~1.3 M_sun.
No evidence of supernova ejecta pollution in the K dwarf.
A white dwarf companion explains the system's properties better than a neutron star.
Abstract
LAMOST J235456.73+335625 (J2354) is a binary system hosting a K dwarf and a dark companion, supposedly a neutron star, in a 0.48d orbit. Here we present high- and low-resolution spectroscopy to better constrain the properties of the system. The low-resolution spectrum confirms that the luminous star is a slightly metal-poor K dwarf and strengthens the limits on any optical flux from the dimmer companion. We use the high-resolution spectra to measure atmospheric parameters (, , [Fe/H], ) and abundances for 8 elements for the K dwarf. We refine the mass of the compact object to with a minimum mass of . The expected overabundance of intermediate-mass elements from the incident supernova ejecta is not detected in the K-dwarf…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
