NGC 1850 BH1 is another stripped-star binary masquerading as a black hole
Abstract
We show that the radial velocity-variable star in the black hole candidate NGC 1850 BH1 cannot be a normal ≈ 5\,M subgiant, as was proposed, but is an overluminous stripped-envelope star with mass ≈ 1 M. The result follows directly from the star's observed radius and the orbital period -- density relation for Roche lobe-filling stars: the star's density, as constrained by the observed ellipsoidal variability, is too low for its mass to exceed ≈ 1.5\,M. This lower mass significantly reduces the implied mass of the unseen companion and qualitative interpretation of the system, such that a normal main-sequence companion with mass (2.5-5)\,M is fully consistent with the data. We explore evolutionary scenarios that could produce the binary using MESA and find that its properties can be matched by models in which a 5\,M primary loses most of its envelope to a companion and is observed in a bloated state before contracting to become a core helium burning sdOB star. This is similar to the scenario proposed to explain the binaries LB-1 and HR 6819. Though it likely does not contain a black hole, NGC 1850 BH1 provides an interesting test case for binary evolution models, particularly given its membership in a cluster of known age.
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