The highly magnetic Wolf-Rayet binary HD 45166 resolved with
VLTI/GRAVITY
HD 45166 was recently reported to be a long-period binary comprising a
B7 V star and a highly magnetic (⟨B⟩=43.0 ± 0.5 kG) hot
Wolf-Rayet-like component, dubbed a quasi Wolf-Rayet (qWR) star in the
literature. While originally proposed to be a short-period binary,
long-term spectroscopic monitoring suggested a 22.5 yr orbital period.
With a derived dynamical mass of 2.03 ± 0.44 M⊙, the qWR
component is the most strongly magnetized non-degenerate object ever
detected and a potential magnetar progenitor. However, the long period
renders the spectroscopic orbital solution and dynamical mass estimates
uncertain, casting doubts on whether the qWR component is massive enough
to undergo core collapse. Here, we spatially resolve the HD 45166 binary
using newly acquired interferometric data obtained with the GRAVITY
instrument of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. Due to the
calibrator star being a binary as well, we implemented a new approach
for visibility calibration and tested it thoroughly using archival
GRAVITY data. The newly calibrated HD 45166 data revealed the
unmistakable presence of a companion to the qWR component with an
angular separation of 10.9 ± 0.1 mas (which translates to a projected
physical separation of 10.8 ± 0.4 au), consistent with the long-period
orbit. We obtained a model-independent qWR mass MqWR =
1.96âˆ0.54+0.74 M⊙ M qWR = 1 . 96 ∠0.54 + 0.74 M ⊙
using interferometric and spectroscopic data together. This observation
robustly confirms that HD 45166 is truly a long-period binary and
provides an anchor point for accurate mass determination of the qWR
component with further observations. ⋆ Based on observations
collected at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) under ESO program
ID 112.25RX (PI: Shenar).
Preprint (deshmukh+2025-qWR.pdf, 1.0MB)
This paper in ADS
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