NGC 2004 #115: a black hole imposter containing three luminous stars

Abstract

NGC 2004 #115 is a recently identified black hole (BH) candidate in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) containing a B star orbiting an unseen companion in a 2.9 day orbit and Be star tertiary. We show that the unseen companion is not a 25\,M BH, but a (2-3)\,M luminous star. Analyzing the OGLE and MACHO light curves of the system, we detect ellipsoidal variability with amplitude 10 times larger than would be expected if the companion were a 25\,M BH, ruling out the low inclination required for a massive companion. The light curve also shows a clear reflection effect that is well-modeled with a 2.5\,M main-sequence secondary, ruling out a lower-mass BH or neutron star companion. We consider and reject models in which the system is a binary containing a stripped star orbiting the Be star: only a triple model with an outer Be star can explain both the observed light curve and radial velocities. Our results imply that the B star, whose slow projected rotation velocity and presumed tidal synchronization were interpreted as evidence for a low inclination (and thus a high companion mass), is far from being tidally synchronized: despite being in a 2.9 day orbit that is fully or nearly circularized (e < 0.04), its surface rotation period appears to be at least 20 days. We offer cautionary notes on the interpretation of dormant BH candidates in binaries.

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