An observational study of rotation and binarity of Galactic O-type runaway stars
M. Carretero-Castrillo, M. Rib\'o, J. M. Paredes, G. Holgado, C. Mart\'inez-Sebasti\'an, S. Sim\'on-D\'iaz

TL;DR
This study analyzes the kinematics, rotation, and binarity of 214 Galactic O-type runaway stars using Gaia DR3 and spectroscopic data to understand their origins, finding that most are slow rotators and that different ejection mechanisms dominate at different velocities.
Contribution
It provides the largest detailed characterization of Galactic O-type runaways, combining kinematic, rotational, and binary data to constrain their ejection scenarios.
Findings
Most runaways are slow rotators with $v \, \sin{i}<200$ km/s.
Fast rotators are more likely to be runaways from binary supernova scenarios.
High-velocity runaways are mostly single stars from dynamical ejection or two-step processes.
Abstract
Gaia DR3 data have revealed new massive runaway stars, while spectroscopic surveys enable detailed characterization. The relative contributions of binary supernova (BSS) and dynamical ejection (DES) scenarios to explain their runaway origin remain poorly constrained, particularly in the Milky Way. We aim to characterize the largest sample of Galactic O-type runaway stars ever investigated through their kinematics, rotation, and binarity to shed light into their origins. We use the GOSC-Gaia DR3 catalog, and IACOB spectroscopic information to build a sample with 214 O-type stars with projected rotational velocities (), and a subsample of 168 O-type stars with additional information about their likely single (LS) or single-lined (SB1) spectroscopic binary nature. We also consider an additional sample of 65 double-lined (SB2) spectroscopic binaries. We find that among our sample…
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