Cygnus X‐2: The Descendant of an Intermediate‐Mass X‐Ray Binary

  • Podsiadlowski P
  • Rappaport S
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Abstract

The X-ray binary Cygnus X-2 (Cyg X-2) has recently been shown to contain a secondary that is much more luminous and hotter than is appropriate for a low-mass subgiant. We present detailed binary-evolution calculations which demonstrate that the present evolutionary state of Cyg X-2 can be understood if the secondary had an initial mass of around 3.5 M_sun and started to transfer mass near the end of its main-sequence phase (or, somewhat less likely, just after leaving the main sequence). Most of the mass of the secondary must have been ejected from the system during an earlier rapid mass-transfer phase. In the present phase, the secondary has a mass of around 0.5 M_sun with a non-degenerate helium core. It is burning hydrogen in a shell, and mass transfer is driven by the advancement of the burning shell. Cyg X-2 therefore is related to a previously little studied class of intermediate-mass X-ray binaries (IMXBs). We suggest that perhaps a significant fraction of X-ray binaries presently classified as low-mass X-ray binaries may be descendants of IMXBs and discuss some of the implications.

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APA

Podsiadlowski, Ph., & Rappaport, S. (2000). Cygnus X‐2: The Descendant of an Intermediate‐Mass X‐Ray Binary. The Astrophysical Journal, 529(2), 946–951. https://doi.org/10.1086/308323

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