The Red Supergiant Binary Fraction of the Large Magellanic Cloud

  • Neugent K
  • Levesque E
  • Massey P
  • et al.
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Abstract

The binary fraction of unevolved massive stars is thought to be 70%–100% but there are few observational constraints on the binary fraction of the evolved version of a subset of these stars, the red supergiants (RSGs). Here we identify a complete sample of RSGs in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using new spectroscopic observations and archival UV, IR, and broadband optical photometry. We find 4090 RSGs with , with 1820 of them having , which we believe is our completeness limit. We additionally spectroscopically confirmed 38 new RSG + B-star binaries in the LMC, bringing the total known up to 55. We then estimated the binary fraction using a k-nearest neighbors algorithm that classifies stars as single or binary based on photometry with a spectroscopic sample as a training set. We take into account observational biases such as line-of-sight stars and binaries in eclipse while also calculating model-dependent corrections for RSGs with companions that our observations were not designed to detect. Based on our data, we find an initial result of for RSGs with O- or B-type companions. Using the Binary Population and Spectral Synthesis models to correct for unobserved systems, this corresponds to a total RSG binary fraction of . This number is in broad agreement with what we would expect given an initial OB binary distribution of 70%, a predicted merger fraction of 20%–30%, and a binary interaction fraction of 40%–50%.

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Neugent, K. F., Levesque, E. M., Massey, P., Morrell, N. I., & Drout, M. R. (2020). The Red Supergiant Binary Fraction of the Large Magellanic Cloud. The Astrophysical Journal, 900(2), 118. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ababaa

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