Lucky spectroscopy, an equivalent technique to lucky imaging II. Spatially resolved intermediate-resolution blue-violet spectroscopy of 19 close massive binaries using the William Herschel Telescope

Context. Many massive stars have nearby companions. These hamper a characterization of massive stars through spectroscopy. Aims. We continue to obtain spatially resolved spectroscopy of close massive visual binaries to derive their spectral types. Methods. We used the lucky spectroscopy technique to...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Maíz Apellániz, J., Barbá, R. H., Fariña, C., Sota, A., Pantaleoni González, M., Holgado, G., Negueruela, I., Simón Díaz, S.
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:España
Institución:Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial (INTA)
Repositorio:DIGITAL.INTA Repositorio Digital del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial
OAI Identifier:oai:digital.inta.es:20.500.12666/546
Acceso en línea:https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2021/02/aa39479-20/aa39479-20.html
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12666/546
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Binaries: spectroscopic
Binaries: visual
Methods: data analysis
Stars: early type
Stars: massive
Techniques: spectroscopic
Descripción
Sumario:Context. Many massive stars have nearby companions. These hamper a characterization of massive stars through spectroscopy. Aims. We continue to obtain spatially resolved spectroscopy of close massive visual binaries to derive their spectral types. Methods. We used the lucky spectroscopy technique to obtain a large number of short long-slit spectroscopic exposures of 19 close visual binaries under good seeing conditions. We selected those with the best characteristics, extracted the spectra using multiple-profile fitting, and combined the results to derive spatially separated spectra. The results were analyzed in combination with data from lucky imaging, regular intermediate-resolution single-order spectroscopy, and échelle high-resolution spectroscopy. Results. The new application of lucky spectroscopy has allowed us (among other results) to [a] spatially disentangle two O stars (FN CMa B and 6 Cas B) with brighter BA supergiant companions for the first time; [b] determine that two B stars (α Sco B and HD 164 492 B) with close and more massive companions are fast rotators (in the second case, solving a case of mistaken identity); [c] extend the technique to cases with extreme magnitude differences (the previous two cases plus CS Cam A,B), shorter separations (HD 193 443 A,B), and fainter primary magnitudes down to B = 11 (HD 219 460 A,B); [d] spatially disentangle the spectra of stars with companions as diverse as an A supergiant (6 Cas A), a Wolf-Rayet star (HD 219 460 B = WR 157), and an M supergiant (α Sco A); [e] discover the unexpected identity of some targets such as two previously unknown bright O stars (HD 51 756 B and BD +60 544) and a new member of the rare OC category (HD 8768 A); and [f] identify and classify (in some cases for the first time) which of the components of four visual binaries (σ Ori, HD 219 460, HD 194 649, and HD 191 201) is a double-lined spectroscopic binary. For another seven systems (FN CMa, σ Sco, HD 51 756, HD 218 195, HD 17 520, HD 24 431, and HD 164 492), we detect signs of spectroscopic binarity using high-spectral-resolution spectroscopy. We also determine the limits of the technique.