A microquasar shot out from its birth place
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Date
2004Type
Subject
Abstract
We show that the microquasar LS I +61° 303 is running away from its birth place in a young complex of massive stars. The supernova explosion that formed the compact object shot out the X-ray binary with a linear momentum of 430 ± 140 Mѳ km sˉ¹, which is comparable to the linear momenta found in solitary runaway neutron stars and millisecond pulsars. The properties of the binary system and its runaway motion of 27±6 km sˉ¹ imply that the natal supernova was asymmetric and that the upper limit fo ...
We show that the microquasar LS I +61° 303 is running away from its birth place in a young complex of massive stars. The supernova explosion that formed the compact object shot out the X-ray binary with a linear momentum of 430 ± 140 Mѳ km sˉ¹, which is comparable to the linear momenta found in solitary runaway neutron stars and millisecond pulsars. The properties of the binary system and its runaway motion of 27±6 km sˉ¹ imply that the natal supernova was asymmetric and that the upper limit for the mass that could have been suddenly ejected in the explosion is ~2 Mѳ. The initial mass of the progenitor star of the compact object that is inferred depends on whether the formation of massive stars in the parent stellar cluster was coeval or a sequential process. ...
In
Astronomy and Astrophysics. Berlin. Vol. 422, no. 2 (Aug. 2004), p. L29-32
Source
Foreign
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