A Be star-black hole binary with a wide orbit from LAMOST time-domain survey
Qian-Yu An, Yang Huang, Wei-Min Gu, Yong Shao, Zhi-Xiang Zhang, Tuan Yi, B. D. Lailey, T. A. A. Sigut, Kyle Akira Rocha, Meng Sun, Seth Gossage, Shi-Jie Gao, Shan-Shan Weng, Song Wang, Bowen Zhang, Xinlin Zhao, Senyu Qi, Shilong Liao, Jianghui Ji, Junfeng Wang, Jianfeng Wu

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of ALS 8814, a confirmed Be star-black hole binary with a wide orbit, providing new insights into black hole formation and binary evolution through precise radial velocity measurements.
Contribution
It presents the first robust identification of a Be-BH binary using RV measurements, with detailed analysis of the system's properties and implications for BH formation.
Findings
Confirmed Be-BH binary with a wide orbit and eccentricity
Black hole mass estimated between 15 and 58 solar masses
Evidence for direct core-collapse BH formation with negligible natal kick
Abstract
Binary systems consisting of an early type star and a black hole (BH) are crucial for understanding various astrophysical phenomena, particularly the origins of detected gravitational wave sources. Be binary systems are expected to represent a key evolutionary stage in hosting BHs. However, while hundreds of Be X-ray binaries are known, the only confirmed BH candidate in a Be binary remains highly controversial. We report the discovery of ALS 8814, a Be star-BH binary with a moderately eccentric () and wide orbit ( days), revealed by the radial velocity (RV) measurement of the visible Be star. Our analysis, combining flux-calibrated spectra in the Balmer discontinuity region and spectral template matching, yields a mass of for the Be star. The minimum mass of the unseen companion, assuming an edge-on inclination (), is…
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