The physical properties of post-mass-transfer binaries
Rhys Seeburger, Hans-Walter Rix, Kareem El-Badry, Johanna M\"uller-Horn, Alex J. Dimoff, Jan Henneco, Jaime I. Villase\~nor

TL;DR
This study confirms six binary systems are post-mass-transfer binaries with luminous, rapidly rotating A-type stars and low-mass donors, showing no evidence of black holes or ongoing mass transfer, and provides detailed physical parameters of these systems.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed physical characterization of six post-mass-transfer binaries, clarifying their nature and challenging assumptions about angular momentum transfer during mass accretion.
Findings
All systems are confirmed as post-mass-transfer binaries, not black hole systems.
Accretors are rapidly rotating A-type stars with sub-critical rotation speeds.
No current mass transfer or emission lines observed in five systems.
Abstract
Aims. We present and analyse the detailed physical properties of six binary stellar systems, originally proposed as possible star-black hole binaries on the basis of radial velocities from Gaia's third data release, but soon recognised as likely post-mass-transfer binary systems with stripped companions. Methods. We used multi-epoch high-resolution FEROS spectra and spectral disentangling paired with stellar templates to derive effective temperatures, ; stellar radii, R*; and projected rotational velocities, v for both components in all systems along with the mass ratio, q = and the components' flux ratio as a function of wavelength. Results. Our analysis directly confirms that all systems are post-mass-transfer binaries with two luminous stars, i.e. no black hole companions. Each system contains an A-type accretor…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
