The origin of the most recently ejected OB runaway star from the R136 cluster
Simon Portegies Zwart, Michel Stoop, Lex Kaper, Alex de Kooter, Steven Rieder, Tomer Shenar

TL;DR
Using Gaia data, the study reconstructs the recent dynamical ejection of a massive star from R136, revealing a complex five-star interaction involving a triple system, and predicts future supernovae and black hole formation.
Contribution
First direct dynamical reconstruction of a recent massive star ejection from R136 involving a five-star interaction, challenging previous assumptions about triple interactions causing runaways.
Findings
Ejection of Mel 34 was caused by a five-star interaction involving a triple system.
Predicted that Mel 39 is a binary with an 80 Msun companion, escaping at 64 km/s.
Stars will undergo supernovae within 5 Myr, forming black hole binaries unlikely to merge within a Hubble time.
Abstract
The solar-mass (\MSun) star-cluster R136 (NGC~2070) in the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud is the host of at least 55 massive stars (\,\MSun) which move away from the cluster at projected velocities \,km/s \cite{2024Natur.634..809S}. The origin of the high velocities of such runaway stars have been debated since the 1960s, resulting either from dynamical ejections \citep{1961BAN....15..265B,1961BAN....15..291B} or from supernova explosions \citep{1983ApJ...267..322H}. Due to the Gaia satellite's outstanding precision, we can now retrace the most recently ejected binary star, Mel 34, back to the center of R136 and reconstruct the events that 52\,000 years ago let to its removal from R136, i.e., we establish its dynamical interaction and ejection history. We find that this ejection requires the participation of 5 stars in a strong…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
