Ultraviolet spectropolarimetry: conservative and nonconservative mass transfer in OB interacting binaries
Abstract
The current consensus is that at least half of the OB stars are formed in binary or multiple star systems. The evolution of OB stars is greatly influenced by whether the stars begin as close binaries, and the evolution of the binary systems depend on whether the mass transfer is conservative or nonconservative. FUV/NUV spectropolarimetry is poised to answer the latter question. This paper discusses how the Polstar spectropolarimetry mission can characterize the degree of nonconservative mass transfer that occurs at various stages of binary evolution, from the initial mass reversal to the late Algol phase, and quantify its amount. The proposed instrument combines spectroscopic and polarimetric capabilities, where the spectroscopy can resolve Doppler shifts in UV resonance lines with 10 km/s precision, and polarimetry can resolve linear polarization with
- Publication:
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Astrophysics and Space Science
- Pub Date:
- December 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2111.14047
- Bibcode:
- 2022Ap&SS.367..119P
- Keywords:
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- Algol variable stars (24);
- Be stars (142);
- Close binary stars (254);
- Circumstellar matter (241);
- Early-type emission stars (428);
- Instruments;
- Multiple star evolution (2153);
- NASA: MIDEX;
- O subdwarf stars (1138);
- Spectropolarimetry (1973);
- Stellar mass loss (1613);
- Ultraviolet astronomy (1736);
- Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics;
- Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- Refereed paper in Ap&