Characterising the orbit and circumstellar environment of the high-mass binary MWC 166 A

Context: Stellar evolution models are highly dependent on accurate mass estimates, especially for high-mass stars in the early stages of evolution. The most direct method for obtaining model-independent masses is derivation from the orbit of close binaries. Aims: To derive the first astrometric+RV o...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2022-07
Hauptverfasser: Zarrilli, Sebastian A, Kraus, Stefan, Kreplin, Alexander, Monnier, John D, Gardner, Tyler, Mérand, Antoine, Morrell, Sam, Davies, Claire L, Labdon, Aaron, Ennis, Jacob, Setterholm, Benjamin, Jean-Baptiste Le Bouquin, Anugu, Narsireddy, Lanthermann, Cyprien, Schaefer, Gail, Theo ten Brummelaar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Context: Stellar evolution models are highly dependent on accurate mass estimates, especially for high-mass stars in the early stages of evolution. The most direct method for obtaining model-independent masses is derivation from the orbit of close binaries. Aims: To derive the first astrometric+RV orbit solution for the single-lined spectroscopic binary MWC 166 A, based on CHARA and VLTI near-infrared interferometry over multiple epochs and ~100 archival radial velocity measurements, and to derive fundamental stellar parameters from this orbit. We also sought to model circumstellar activity in the system from K-band spectral lines. Methods: We geometrically modelled the dust continuum to derive astrometry at 13 epochs and constrain individual stellar parameters. We used the continuum models as a base to examine differential phases, visibilities and closure phases over the Br-\(\gamma\) and He-I emission lines. Results: Our orbit solution suggests a period of \(367.7\pm0.1\) d, twice as long as found with previous RV orbit fits, subsequently constraining the component masses to \(M_1=12.2\pm2.2 M_\odot\) and \(M_2=4.9\pm0.5 M_\odot\). The line-emitting gas was found to be localised around the primary and is spatially resolved on scales of ~11 stellar radii, with the spatial displacement between the line wings consistent with a rotating disc. Conclusions: The large radius and stable orientation of the line emission are inconsistent with magnetospheric or boundary-layer accretion, but indicate an ionised inner gas disk around MWC 166 Aa. We observe line variability that could be explained either with generic line variability in a Herbig star disc or V/R variations in a decretion disc. We also constrained the age of the system to ~\((7\pm2)\times10^5\) yr, consistent with the system being comprised of a main-sequence primary and a secondary still contracting towards the main sequence.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2207.02836