Fundamental Parameters for Central Stars of 103 Infrared Bowshock Nebulae
Abstract
Stellar bowshock nebulae are arcuate shock fronts formed by the interaction of radiation-driven stellar winds and the relative motion of the ambient interstellar material. Stellar bowshock nebulae provide a promising means to measure wind-driven mass loss, independent of other established methods. In this work, we characterize the stellar sources at the center of bowshock nebulae drawn from all-sky catalogs of 24 μm-selected nebulae. We obtain new, low-resolution blue optical spectra for ~stars and measure stellar parameters temperature , surface gravity , and projected rotational broadening . We perform additional photometric analysis to measure stellar radius , luminosity , and visual-band extinction AV. All but one of our targets are O and early B stars, with temperatures ranging from T=16.5--46.8~k, gravities g=2.57--4.60, and ~from <100--400~. With the exception of rapid rotator ζ Oph, bowshock stars do not rotate at or near critical velocities. At least 60 of 103 (60\%) OB bowshock stars are binaries, consistent with the multiplicity fraction of other OB samples. The sample shows a runaway fraction of 23\%, with ~stars having v2D≥25~. Of the 19 runaways, at least 15 (≥79\%) are binaries, favoring dynamical ejection over the binary supernova channel for producing runaways. We provide a comprehensive census of stellar parameters for bowshock stars, useful as a foundation for determining the mass-loss rates for OB-type stars -- one of the single most critical factors in stellar evolution governing the production of neutron stars and black holes.
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