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2013MNRAS.429.3305B - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 429, 3305-3315 (2013/March-2)
WR 120bb and WR 120bc: a pair of WN9h stars with possibly interacting circumstellar shells.
BURGEMEISTER S., GVARAMADZE V.V., STRINGFELLOW G.S., KNIAZEV A.Y., TODT H. and HAMANN W.-R.
Abstract (from CDS):
The spectra of both stars are classified as WN9h. As their spectra are very similar the parameters that we obtained by the spectral analyses hardly differ. Despite their late spectral subtype, we found relatively high stellar temperatures of 63 kK. The wind composition is dominated by helium, while hydrogen is depleted to 25 per cent by mass.
Because of their location in the Scutum-Centaurus Arm, WR 120bb and WR 120bc appear highly reddened, A_K_s ~2 mag. We adopt a common distance of 5.8 kpc to both stars, which complies with the typical absolute K-band magnitude for the WN9h subtype of -6.5 mag, is consistent with their observed extinction based on comparison with other massive stars in the region, and allows for the possibility that their shells are interacting with each other. This leads to luminosities of log(
The values of the luminosities of WR 120bb and WR 120bc imply that the immediate precursors of both stars were red supergiants (RSG). This implies in turn that the circumstellar shells associated with WR 120bb and WR 120bc were formed by interaction between the WR wind and the dense material shed during the preceding RSG phase.
Abstract Copyright: © 2013 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2013)
Journal keyword(s): line: identification - circumstellar matter - stars: fundamental parameters - stars: massive - stars: Wolf-Rayet
Simbad objects: 16
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