The dynamical mass and evolutionary status of the type-II Cepheid in the eclipsing binary system OGLE-LMC-T2CEP-211 with a double-ring disk

Abstract

We present the analysis of a peculiar W~Virginis (pWVir) type-II Cepheid, OGLE-LMC-T2CEP-211 (Ppuls=9.393\,d), in a double-lined binary system (Porb=242\,d), which shed light on virtually unknown evolutionary status and structure of pWVir stars. The dynamical mass of the Cepheid (first ever for a type-II Cepheid) is 0.640.02\,M and the radius R=25.10.3\,R. The companion is a massive (5.67\,M) main-sequence star obscured by a disk. Such configuration suggests a mass transfer in the system history. We found that originally the system (Porbinit=12\,d) was composed of 3.5 and 2.8\,M stars, with the current Cepheid being more massive. The system age is now 200 My, and the Cepheid is almost completely stripped of hydrogen, with helium mass of 92\% of the total mass. It finished transferring the mass 2.5 My ago and is evolving towards lower temperatures passing through the instability strip. Comparison with observations indicate a reasonable 2.7·10-8\,M/y mass loss from the Cepheid. The companion is most probably a Be main-sequence star with T=22000\,K and R=2.5\,R. Our results yield a good agreement with a pulsation theory model for a hydrogen-deficient pulsator, confirming the described evolutionary scenario. We detected a two-ring disk (Rdisk\,116\,R) and a shell (Rshell\,9\,R) around the companion, that is probably a combination of the matter from the past mass transfer, the mass being lost by the Cepheid due to wind and pulsations, and a decretion disk around a rapidly rotating secondary. Our study together with observational properties of pWVir stars suggests that their majority are products of a similar binary evolution interaction.

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