The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Spin–Orbit Alignment of Early-type Astrometric Binaries and the Origin of Slow Rotators

  • Chase L. Smith,
  • Maxwell Moe,
  • Kaitlin M. Kratter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad6dd2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 975, no. 1
p. 153

Abstract

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The spin–orbit alignment of binary stars traces their formation and accretion history. Previous studies of spin–orbit alignment have been limited to small samples, slowly rotating solar-type stars, and/or wide visual binaries that not surprisingly manifest random spin–orbit orientations. We analyze 917 Gaia astrometric binaries across periods P = 100–3000 days ( a = 0.5–5 au) that have B8-F1 IV/V primaries ( M _1 = 1.5–3 M _⊙ ) and measured projected rotational velocities v sin i . The primary stars in face-on orbits exhibit substantially smaller v sin i compared to those in edge-on orbits at the 6 σ level, demonstrating significant spin–orbit alignment. The primaries in our astrometric binaries are rotating more slowly than their single-star or wide-binary counterparts and therefore comprise the slow-rotator population in the observed bimodal rotational velocity distribution of early-type stars. We discuss formation models of close binaries where some of the disk angular momentum is transferred to the orbit and/or secondary spin, quenching angular momentum flow to the primary spin. The primaries in astrometric binaries with small mass ratios q = M _2 / M _1 0.4 do not display spin–orbit alignment or spin reduction. Using a Monte Carlo technique, we measure a spin–orbit alignment fraction of F _align = 75% ± 5% and an average spin reduction factor of 〈 S _align 〉 = 0.43 ± 0.04. We conclude that 75% of close A-type binaries likely experienced circumbinary disk accretion and probably formed via disk fragmentation and inward disk migration. The remaining 25%, mostly those with e > 0.4, likely formed via core fragmentation and orbital decay via dynamical friction.

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