130 research outputs found
Formation of the black-hole binary M33 X-7 via mass-exchange in a tight massive system
M33 X-7 is among the most massive X-Ray binary stellar systems known, hosting
a rapidly spinning 15.65 Msun black hole orbiting an underluminous 70 Msun Main
Sequence companion in a slightly eccentric 3.45 day orbit. Although
post-main-sequence mass transfer explains the masses and tight orbit, it leaves
unexplained the observed X-Ray luminosity, star's underluminosity, black hole's
spin, and eccentricity. A common envelope phase, or rotational mixing, could
explain the orbit, but the former would lead to a merger and the latter to an
overluminous companion. A merger would also ensue if mass transfer to the black
hole were invoked for its spin-up. Here we report that, if M33 X-7 started as a
primary of 85-99 Msun and a secondary of 28-32 Msun, in a 2.8-3.1 day orbit,
its observed properties can be consistently explained. In this model, the Main
Sequence primary transferred part of its envelope to the secondary and lost the
rest in a wind; it ended its life as a ~16 Msun He star with a Fe-Ni core which
collapsed to a black hole (with or without an accompanying supernova). The
release of binding energy and, possibly, collapse asymmetries "kicked" the
nascent black hole into an eccentric orbit. Wind accretion explains the X-Ray
luminosity, while the black hole spin can be natal.Comment: Manuscript: 18 pages, 2 tables, 2 figure. Supplementary Information:
34 pages, 6 figures. Advance Online Publication (AOP) on
http://www.nature.com/nature on October 20, 2010. To Appear in Nature on
November 4, 201
A 15.65 solar mass black hole in an eclipsing binary in the nearby spiral galaxy Messier 33
Stellar-mass black holes are discovered in X-ray emitting binary systems,
where their mass can be determined from the dynamics of their companion stars.
Models of stellar evolution have difficulty producing black holes in close
binaries with masses >10 solar masses, which is consistent with the fact that
the most massive stellar black holes known so all have masses within 1 sigma of
10 solar masses. Here we report a mass of 15.65 +/- 1.45 solar masses for the
black hole in the recently discovered system M33 X-7, which is located in the
nearby galaxy Messier 33 (M33) and is the only known black hole that is in an
eclipsing binary. In order to produce such a massive black hole, the progenitor
star must have retained much of its outer envelope until after helium fusion in
the core was completed. On the other hand, in order for the black hole to be in
its present 3.45 day orbit about its 70.0 +/- 6.9 solar mass companion, there
must have been a ``common envelope'' phase of evolution in which a significant
amount of mass was lost from the system. We find the common envelope phase
could not have occured in M33 X-7 unless the amount of mass lost from the
progenitor during its evolution was an order of magnitude less than what is
usually assumed in evolutionary models of massive stars.Comment: To appear in Nature October 18, 2007. Four figures (one color figure
degraded). Differs slightly from published version. Supplementary Information
follows in a separate postin
New Insights into X-ray Binaries
X-ray binaries are excellent laboratories to study collapsed objects. On the
one hand, transient X-ray binaries contain the best examples of stellar-mass
black holes while persistent X-ray binaries mostly harbour accreting neutron
stars. The determination of stellar masses in persistent X-ray binaries is
usually hampered by the overwhelming luminosity of the X-ray heated accretion
disc. However, the discovery of high-excitation emission lines from the
irradiated companion star has opened new routes in the study of compact
objects. This paper presents novel techniques which exploits these irradiated
lines and summarises the dynamical masses obtained for the two populations of
collapsed stars: neutron stars and black holes.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, Invited review to plenary session in
"Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V", Proceedings of the VIII Scientific
Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society (SEA) held in Santander, 7-11
July, 2008. Edited by J. Gorgas, L. J. Goicoechea, J. I. Gonzalez-Serrano, J.
M. Dieg
The EBLM project-VII. Spin-orbit alignment for the circumbinary planet host EBLM J0608-59 A/TOI-1338 A
A dozen short-period detached binaries are known to host transiting
circumbinary planets. In all circumbinary systems so far, the planetary and
binary orbits are aligned within a couple of degrees. However, the obliquity of
the primary star, which is an important tracer of their formation, evolution,
and tidal history, has only been measured in one circumbinary system until now.
EBLM J0608-59/TOI-1338 is a low-mass eclipsing binary system with a recently
discovered circumbinary planet identified by TESS. Here, we perform
high-resolution spectroscopy during primary eclipse to measure the projected
stellar obliquity of the primary component. The obliquity is low, and thus the
primary star is aligned with the binary and planetary orbits with a projected
spin-orbit angle deg. The rotation period of days implied by our measurement of suggests that the
primary has not yet pseudo-synchronized with the binary orbit, but is
consistent with gyrochronology and weak tidal interaction with the binary
companion. Our result, combined with the known coplanarity of the binary and
planet orbits, is suggestive of formation from a single disc. Finally, we
considered whether the spectrum of the faint secondary star could affect our
measurements. We show through simulations that the effect is negligible for our
system, but can lead to strong biases in and for
higher flux ratios. We encourage future studies in eclipse spectroscopy test
the assumption of a dark secondary for flux ratios ppt
The population of close double white dwarfs in the Galaxy
We present a new model for the Galactic population of close double white
dwarfs. The model accounts for the suggestion of the avoidance of a substantial
spiral-in during mass transfer between a giant and a main-sequence star of
comparable mass and for detailed cooling models. It agrees well with the
observations of the local sample of white dwarfs if the initial binary fraction
is close to 50% and an ad hoc assumption is made that white dwarfs with mass
less than about 0.3 solar mass cool faster than the models suggest. About 1000
white dwarfs brighter than V=15 have to be surveyed for detection of a pair
which has total mass greater than the Chandrasekhar mass and will merge within
10 Gyr.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Proc. ``The influence of binaries
on stellar population studies'', Brussels, August 2000 (Kluwer, D. Vanbeveren
ed.
Planet formation in Binaries
Spurred by the discovery of numerous exoplanets in multiple systems, binaries
have become in recent years one of the main topics in planet formation
research. Numerous studies have investigated to what extent the presence of a
stellar companion can affect the planet formation process. Such studies have
implications that can reach beyond the sole context of binaries, as they allow
to test certain aspects of the planet formation scenario by submitting them to
extreme environments. We review here the current understanding on this complex
problem. We show in particular how each of the different stages of the
planet-formation process is affected differently by binary perturbations. We
focus especially on the intermediate stage of kilometre-sized planetesimal
accretion, which has proven to be the most sensitive to binarity and for which
the presence of some exoplanets observed in tight binaries is difficult to
explain by in-situ formation following the "standard" planet-formation
scenario. Some tentative solutions to this apparent paradox are presented. The
last part of our review presents a thorough description of the problem of
planet habitability, for which the binary environment creates a complex
situation because of the presence of two irradation sources of varying
distance.Comment: Review chapter to appear in "Planetary Exploration and Science:
Recent Advances and Applications", eds. S. Jin, N. Haghighipour, W.-H. Ip,
Springer (v2, numerous typos corrected
High energy emission from microquasars
The microquasar phenomenon is associated with the production of jets by X-ray
binaries and, as such, may be associated with the majority of such systems. In
this chapter we briefly outline the associations, definite, probable, possible,
and speculative, between such jets and X-ray, gamma-ray and particle emission.Comment: Contributing chapter to the book Cosmic Gamma-Ray Sources, K.S. Cheng
and G.E. Romero (eds.), to be published by Kluwer Academic Publishers,
Dordrecht, 2004. (19 pages
Updated radial velocities and new constraints on the nature of the unseen source in NGC1850 BH1
A black hole candidate orbiting a luminous star in the Large Magellanic Cloud young cluster NGC 1850 (∼100 Myr) has recently been reported based on radial velocity and light-curve modelling. Subsequently, an alternative explanation has been suggested for the system: a bloated post-mass transfer secondary star (Minitial ∼ 4–5 M⊙ and Mcurrent ∼ 1–2 M⊙) with a more massive, yet luminous companion (the primary). Upon reanalysis of the MUSE spectra, we found that the radial velocity variations originally reported were underestimated (K2, revised = 176 ± 3 km s−1 versus K2, original = 140 ± 3 km s−1) because of the weighting scheme adopted in the full-spectrum fitting analysis. The increased radial velocity semi-amplitude translates into a system mass function larger than previously deduced (frevised = 2.83 M⊙versus foriginal = 1.42 M⊙). By exploiting the spectral disentangling technique, we place an upper limit of 10 per cent of a luminous primary source to the observed optical light in NGC1850 BH1, assuming that the primary and secondary are the only components contributing to the system. Furthermore, by analysing archival near-infrared data, we find clues to the presence of an accretion disc in the system. These constraints support a low-mass post-mass transfer star but do not provide a definitive answer whether the unseen component in NGC1850 BH1 is indeed a black hole. These results predict a scenario where, if a primary luminous source of mass M ≥ 4.7 M⊙ is present in the system (given the inclination and secondary mass constraints), it must be hidden in a optically thick disc to be undetected in the MUSE spectra
Primary de novo malignant giant cell tumor of kidney: a case report
BACKGROUND: Osteoclast-like giant cell tumors are usually observed in osseous tissue or as tumors of tendon sheath, characterized by the presence of multinucleated giant cells and mononuclear stromal cells. It has been reported in various extraosseous sites including breast, skin, soft tissue, salivary glands, lung, pancreas, female genital tract, thyroid, larynx and heart. However, extraosseus occurrence of such giant cell tumors in the kidney is extremely rare and is usually found in combination with a conventional malignancy. De-novo primary malignant giant cell tumors of the kidney are unusual lesions and to our knowledge this is the second such case. CASE PRESENTATION: We report a rare case of extraosseous primary denovo malignant giant cell tumor of the renal parenchyma in a 39-year-old Caucasian female to determine the histogenesis of this neoplasm with a detailed literature review. CONCLUSION: Primary denovo malignant giant cell tumor of the kidney is extremely rare. The cellular origin of this tumor is favored to be a pluripotential mesenchymal stromal cell of the mononuclear/phagocytic cellular lineage. Awareness of this neoplasm is important in the pathological interpretation of unusual findings at either fine needle aspiration or frozen section of solid renal masses
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