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P102 |
September 2005
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To be published in:
Astronomy & Astrophysics
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The massive binary CPD-41°7742.
II. Optical light curve and X-ray observations+
H. Sana1,*,
E. Antokhina2,
P. Royer3,
J. Manfroid1,**,
E. Gosset1,***,
G. Rauw1,*** and
J.-M. Vreux1
1 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Allée du 6 Août, Bât B5c, B-4000 Liège (Sart Tilman), Belgium
2 Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow State University, Universitetskii Pr., 13, 119899 Moscow, Russia
3 Instituut voor Sterrenkunde, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200 B, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
* Research Fellow FNRS, Belgium
** Research Director FNRS, Belgium
*** Research Associate FNRS, Belgium
+ Based on observations collected at the European Southern Observatory (La Silla, Chile) and with XMM-Newton, an ESA Science Mission with instruments and contributions directly funded by ESA Member states and the USA (NASA).
In the first paper of this series, we presented a detailed high-resolution
spectroscopic study of CPD-41°7742, deriving for the first time an
orbital solution for both components of the system. In this second paper,
we focus on the analysis of the optical light curve and on recent XMM-Newto
X-ray observations. In the optical, the system presents two eclipses,
yielding an inclination i ~ 77°. Combining the constraints from
the photometry with the results of our previous work, we derive the absolute
parameters of the system. We confirm that the two components of
CPD-41°7742 are main sequence stars (O9 V + B1-1.5 V) with masses
(M1 ~ 18 Msol and
M2 ~ 10 Msol) and respective radii
(R1 ~ 7.5 Rsol and
R2 ~ 5.4 Rsol) close to the typical values
expected for such stars.
We also report an unprecedented set of X-ray observations that almost
uniformly cover the 2.44-day orbital cycle. The X-ray emission from
CPD-41°7742 is well described by a two-temperature thermal plasma
model with energies close to 0.6 and 1.0 keV, thus slightly harder than
typical early-type emission. The X-ray light curve shows clear signs of
variability. The emission level is higher when the primary is in front
of the secondary. During the high emission state, the system shows a drop
of its X-ray emission that almost exactly matches the optical eclipse.
We interpret the main features of the X-ray light curve as the signature
of a wind-photosphere interaction, in which the overwhelming primary O9
star wind crashes into the secondary surface. Alternatively the light curve
could result from a wind-wind interaction zone located near the secondary
star surface. As a support to our interpretation, we provide a
phenomenological geometric model that qualitatively reproduces
the observed modulations of the X-ray emission.
stars: individual: CPD - 410 7742 -- stars: binaries: close --
stars: binaries: eclipsing -- stars: early-type --
stars: fundamental parameters -- X-rays: stars
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