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Published July 2018 | Published
Journal Article Open

Spectral models for binary products: Unifying subdwarfs and Wolf-Rayet stars as a sequence of stripped-envelope stars

Abstract

Stars stripped of their hydrogen-rich envelope through interaction with a binary companion are generally not considered when accounting for ionizing radiation from stellar populations, despite the expectation that stripped stars emit hard ionizing radiation, form frequently, and live 10–100 times longer than single massive stars. We compute the first grid of evolutionary and spectral models specially made for stars stripped in binaries for a range of progenitor masses (2–20 M_⊙) and metallicities ranging from solar to values representative for pop II stars. For stripped stars with masses in the range 0.3–7 M_⊙, we find consistently high effective temperatures (20 000–100 000 K, increasing with mass), small radii (0.2–1 R_⊙), and high bolometric luminosities, comparable to that of their progenitor before stripping. The spectra show a continuous sequence that naturally bridges subdwarf-type stars at the low-mass end and Wolf-Rayet-like spectra at the high-mass end. For intermediate masses we find hybrid spectral classes showing a mixture of absorption and emission lines. These appear for stars with mass-loss rates of 10^(−8)−10^(−6) M_⊙ yr^(−1), which have semi-transparent atmospheres. At low metallicity, substantial hydrogen-rich layers are left at the surface and we predict spectra that resemble O-type stars instead. We obtain spectra undistinguishable from subdwarfs for stripped stars with masses up to 1.7 M_⊙, which questions whether the widely adopted canonical value of 0.47 M_⊙ is uniformly valid. Only a handful of stripped stars of intermediate mass have currently been identified observationally. Increasing this sample will provide necessary tests for the physics of interaction, internal mixing, and stellar winds. We use our model spectra to investigate the feasibility to detect stripped stars next to an optically bright companion and recommend systematic searches for their UV excess and possible emission lines, most notably HeII λ4686 in the optical and HeII λ1640 in the UV. Our models are publicly available for further investigations or inclusion in spectral synthesis simulations.

Additional Information

© ESO 2018. Received 10 November 2017 / Accepted 8 February 2018. The authors acknowledge various people for helpful and inspiring discussion at various stages during the preparation of this manuscript, including Evan Bauer, Jared Brooks, Maria Drout, JJ Eldridge, Chris Evans, Rob Farmer, Miriam Garcia, Stephan Geier, Zhanwen Han, Edward van den Heuvel, Stephen Justam, Lex Kaper, Alex de Koter, Søren Larsen, Danny Lennon, Pablo Marchant, Colin Norman, Philipp Podsiadlowski, Onno Pols, Hugues Sana, Tomer Shenar, Nathan Smith, Elizabeth Stanway, Silvia Toonen, Jorick Vink, and the VFTS collaboration. YG, SdM, and MR acknowledge hospitality of the Kavli Institute for Theoretical physics, Santa Barbara, CA. Their stay was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. NSF PHY11-25915. This work was carried out on the Dutch national e-infrastructure with the support of SURF Cooperative. The authors acknowledges John Hillier for making his code, CMFGEN, publicly available. YG thank Martin Heemskerk for providing computing expertise and support throughout the project and Alessandro Patruno for allowing us to use the Taurus computer. SdM has received funding under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme from the European under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie (Grant Agreement No. 661502) and the European Research Council (ERC) (Grant agreement No. 715063).

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August 19, 2023
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