2011
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/142/5/146
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Radial Velocities of Galactic O-Type Stars. I. Short-Term Constant Velocity Stars

Abstract: We present radial velocities for 18 Galactic O-type stars. These stars display small radial velocity scatter over timescales of one to two weeks. Some of them are long-period binaries while others are probably single stars. By fitting model spectra to our observed spectra we obtain estimates for effective temperature, log g, rotational velocity, and average radial velocity for each target.

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(72 reference statements)
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“…However, we do not observe the usual line doubling in our spectra. All recent data (our work and literature; Williams et al 2011) are very similar with RVs between −70 and −90 km s −1 ; old RV measurements (Feast & Thackeray 1963;Kilkenny & Hill 1975) differ from these, reaching higher and lower values. However, even after discarding them, the RV changes are found to be significant hence we classify this star as RV variable.…”
Section: C27 Hd 124979supporting
confidence: 83%
“…However, we do not observe the usual line doubling in our spectra. All recent data (our work and literature; Williams et al 2011) are very similar with RVs between −70 and −90 km s −1 ; old RV measurements (Feast & Thackeray 1963;Kilkenny & Hill 1975) differ from these, reaching higher and lower values. However, even after discarding them, the RV changes are found to be significant hence we classify this star as RV variable.…”
Section: C27 Hd 124979supporting
confidence: 83%
“…Radial velocity variations have been reported for this object from low‐resolution monitoring (Combi et al 2011; Williams et al 2011), suggesting the star to be a binary. With the information at hand before this study, X‐rays linked to a wind–wind collision might at first seem a good explanation for the observed high‐energy characteristics.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Moreover, HD 93250 displays large X‐ray variations (Rauw et al 2009), which reinforces the suspicion of a binary nature. Though radial velocity variations have never been observed up to now (see Rauw et al 2009; Williams et al 2011, and references therein), a close companion was recently detected using interferometry (Sana et al 2011). HD 93250 now appears to be composed of two similar stars, whose winds collide, in a long‐period, eccentric orbit.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests an orbital period around 8.5 years, making 9 Sgr one of the spectroscopic O-type binaries with the longest orbital period so far. Williams et al (2011) recently presented a set of 16 RV measurements of 9 Sgr, obtained over 13 consecutive nights in May-June 2004, i.e. near maximum RV separation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%