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The Evolutionary Status of SS433

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abstract

We consider possible evolutionary models for SS 433. We assume that common-envelope evolution is avoided if radiation pressure is able to expel most of a super-Eddington accretion flow from a region smaller than the accretor's Roche lobe. This condition is satisfied, at least initially, for largely radiative donors with masses in the range 4-12 solar masses. For donors more massive than about 5 solar masses, moderate mass ratios q = M_2/M_1 > 1 are indicated, thus tending to favor black-hole accretors. For lower mass donors, evolutionary considerations do not distinguish between a neutron star or black hole accretor. In all cases the mass transfer (and mass loss) rates are much larger than the likely mass-loss rate in the precessing jets. Almost all of the transferred mass is expelled at radii considerably larger than the jet acceleration region, producing the "stationary" H-alpha line, the infrared luminosity, and accounting for the low X-ray luminosity.

fields

astro-ph.HE 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

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Little Red Dots as Supermassive Analogs of SS 433

astro-ph.HE · 2026-06-19 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

LRDs are interpreted as high-inclination hyper-Eddington accreting SMBHs analogous to SS 433, with V-shaped SEDs, X-ray weakness, and Balmer breaks emerging from disk self-shielding geometry.

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  • Little Red Dots as Supermassive Analogs of SS 433 astro-ph.HE · 2026-06-19 · unverdicted · none · ref 5 · internal anchor

    LRDs are interpreted as high-inclination hyper-Eddington accreting SMBHs analogous to SS 433, with V-shaped SEDs, X-ray weakness, and Balmer breaks emerging from disk self-shielding geometry.