Ancient, eclipsing, tidally-locked: A blue lurker progenitor in the population of extreme-velocity star candidates
A. Bhat, M. Dorsch, S. Geier, U. Heber, H. Dawson, F.Mattig, D. Benitez-Palacios, and Pablo Fernandez-Schlosser

TL;DR
This study confirms the nature of a high-velocity star as a tidally-synchronized binary with a metal-poor M dwarf companion, revealing insights into the population of extreme-velocity stars and their origins.
Contribution
It provides spectroscopic confirmation and detailed analysis of a high-velocity star, identifying it as a binary system with specific stellar parameters and metallicity, expanding understanding of extreme-velocity star progenitors.
Findings
J1903-0023 is a fast-rotating, metal-poor halo star.
The star is a tidally-synchronized binary with an M dwarf companion.
Both analyzed stars are old, metal-poor, and share similar properties.
Abstract
Many extreme velocity candidate stars have been found based on \textit{Gaia} astrometry, but need spectroscopic confirmation. We select late-type hypervelocity star (HVS) candidates from the \textit{Gaia} DR3 catalog with a lower limit of the tangential velocity of 800 km\,s. J1903-0023, one of the brightest targets, stands out as high priority candidate for follow-up spectroscopy using the X-shooter instrument at ESO-VLT. We determine its atmospheric parameters and abundances utilizing synthetic spectral grids and a global minimization procedure, and its stellar parameters with the help of evolutionary tracks and the spectral energy distribution. The star shows variability in its light curve and follow-up spectroscopy confirms that the star is radial-velocity variable. The spectroscopic distance of J1903-0023 is lower than that based on the parallax,…
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