Ionizing spectra of stars that lose their envelope through interaction with a binary companion role of metallicity
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| Publication date | 2017 |
| Journal | Astronomy & Astrophysics |
| Article number | A11 |
| Volume | Issue number | 608 |
| Number of pages | 22 |
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| Abstract |
Understanding ionizing fluxes of stellar populations is crucial for
various astrophysical problems including the epoch of reionization.
Short-lived massive stars are generally considered as the main stellar
sources. We examine the potential role of less massive stars that lose
their envelope through interaction with a binary companion. Here, we
focus on the role of metallicity (Z). For this purpose we used the
evolutionary code MESA and created tailored atmosphere models with the
radiative transfer code CMFGEN. We show that typical progenitors, with
initial masses of 12 M⊙, produce hot and compact stars (
4 M⊙, 60-80 kK, 1 R⊙). These stripped
stars copiously produce ionizing photons, emitting 60-85% and 30-60% of
their energy as HI and HeI ionizing radiation, for Z = 0.0001-0.02,
respectively. Their output is comparable to what massive stars emit
during their Wolf-Rayet phase, if we account for their longer lifetimes
and the favorable slope of the initial mass function. Their relative
importance for reionization may be further favored since they emit their
photons with a time delay ( 20 Myr after birth in our fiducial model).
This allows time for the dispersal of the birth clouds, allowing the
ionizing photons to escape into the intergalactic medium. At low Z, we
find that Roche stripping fails to fully remove the H-rich envelope,
because of the reduced opacity in the subsurface layers. This is in
sharp contrast with the assumption of complete stripping that is made in
rapid population synthesis simulations, which are widely used to
simulate the binary progenitors of supernovae and gravitational waves.
Finally, we discuss the urgency to increase the observed sample of
stripped stars to test these models and we discuss how our predictions
can help to design efficient observational campaigns.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201730472 |
| Other links | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017A%26A...608A..11G/abstract |
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