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- High Mass X-ray Binaries in the NIR: Orbital solutions of two highly obscured systems.
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High Mass X-ray Binaries in the NIR: Orbital solutions of two highly obscured systems.
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Abstract
The maximum mass of a neutron star (NS) is poorly defined. Theoretical attempts to define this mass have thus far been unsuccessful. Observational results currently provide the only means of narrowing this mass range down. Eclipsing X-ray binary (XRB) pulsar systems are the only interacting binaries in which the mass of the NS may be measured directly. Only 10 such systems are known to exist, 6 of which have yielded NS masses in the range 1.06 - 1.86 Mo. We present the first orbital solutions of two further eclipsing systems, OAO 1657-415 and EXO 1722-363, whose donor stars have only recently been identified. Using observations obtained with the VLT/ISAAC NIR spectrograph, our initial work was concerned with providing an accurate spectral classification of the two counterpart stars, leading to a consistent explanation of the mechanism for spin period evolution of OAO 1657-415. Calculating radial velocities allowed orbital solutions for both systems to be computed. These are the first accurate determinations of the NS and counterpart masses in XRB pulsar systems to be made employing NIR spectroscopy.
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About: A.B. Mason
The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK, a.mason@open.ac.uk
About: A.J. Norton
The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
About: J.S. Clark
The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
About: P. Roche
The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK
About: I. Negueruela
Universidad de Alicante, Alicante, Spain