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Showing papers by "M. H. van Kerkwijk published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1992-Nature
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify spectral features in the near infrared I and K bands that are characteristic of Wolf-Rayet stars: strong, broad emission lines of HeI and HeII, but no strong hydrogen lines.
Abstract: CYGNUS X-3 is one of the most luminous X-ray sources in the Galaxy1,2, a bright infrared source3 and a radio source that undergoes huge outbursts4. The system is a binary, presumably a neutron star plus companion, with a 4.79-h orbital period that modulates the X-ray and infrared emission5,6 and that increases on a 600,000-year timescale7,8. Radio observations reveal the presence of a relativistic jet9. The nature of Cyg X-3 has remained unclear, however, in part because the large interstellar extinction3 in its direction prevents optical spectroscopy. Upper limits on spectral features in the near infrared have been reported previously10, but only with recent instrumental improvements have we become able to identify spectral features in the near infrared I and K bands. These are found to be characteristic of Wolf–Rayet stars: strong, broad emission lines of HeI and HeII, but no strong hydrogen lines. These observations strongly suggest the presence of a dense wind in the Cyg X-3 system, and may indicate that the companion is a fairly massive helium star, as had been predicted11 by a model in which the present system is a descendant of a massive X-ray binary.

212 citations



Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present preliminary results of the X-ray part of an extensive multi-wavelength study of bright OB- and OBe-type stars, aimed at finding evidence for the existence of white-dwarf companions to be stars.
Abstract: We present preliminary results of the X-ray part of an extensive multi-wavelength study of bright OB- and OBe-type stars, aimed at finding evidence for the existence of white-dwarf companions to Be stars. After analysis of 75 percent of the ROSAT all-sky survey, X-ray emission is detected from 129 out of 1026 OB stars in the Bright Star Catalogue, 10 of which are OBe-type stars. However, no indications for white-dwarf companions could yet be found. The detection rate for OBe stars may be lower than for the OB stars without emission (2σ confidence level)