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Creators/Authors contains: "Rosenthal, Alexandra C"

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  1. Abstract Stellar bow shock nebulae are arcuate shock fronts formed by the interaction of radiation-driven stellar winds and the relative motion of the ambient interstellar material. Stellar bow shock nebulae provide a promising means to measure wind-driven mass loss, independent of other established methods. In this work, we characterize the stellar sources at the center of bow shock nebulae drawn from all-sky catalogs of 24μm–selected nebulae. We obtain new, low-resolution blue optical spectra for 104 stars and measure stellar parameters temperatureTeff, surface gravity log g , and projected rotational broadening v sin i . We perform additional photometric analysis to measure stellar radiusR*, luminosityL*, and visual-band extinctionAV. All but one of our targets are O and early B stars, with temperatures ranging fromT= 16.5 to 46.8 kK, gravities from log g = 2.57 to 4.60, and v sin i from <100 to 400 km s−1. With the exception of rapid rotatorζOph, bow shock stars do not rotate at or near critical velocities. At least 60 of 103 (60%) OB bow shock stars are binaries, consistent with the multiplicity fraction of other OB samples. The sample shows a runaway fraction of 23%, with 19 stars havingv2D≥ 25 km s−1. Of the 19 runaways, at least 15 (≥79%) are binaries, favoring dynamical ejection over the binary supernova channel for producing runaways. We provide a comprehensive census of stellar parameters for bow shock stars, useful as a foundation for determining the mass-loss rates for OB-type stars—one of the single most critical factors in stellar evolution governing the production of neutron stars and black holes. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 23, 2026
  2. We present a 34 yr timing solution of the redback pulsar system Terzan 5A (Ter5A). Ter5A, also known as B1744−24A or J1748−2446A, has a 11.56 ms pulse period, a ~0.1 Msun dwarf companion star, and an orbital period of 1.82 hr. Ter5A displays highly variable eclipses and orbital perturbations. Using new timing techniques, we have determined a phase-connected timing solution for this system over 34 yr. This is the longest ever published for a redback pulsar. We find that the pulsar’s spin variability is much larger than most globular cluster pulsars. In fact, of the nine redback pulsars with published or in-preparation long-term timing solutions, Ter5A is by far the noisiest. We see no evidence of strong correlations between orbital and spin variability of the pulsar. We also find that long-term astrometric timing measurements are likely too contaminated by this variability to be usable, and therefore they require careful short-term timing to determine reasonable positions. Finally, we measure an orbital period contraction of  −2.5(3) x 10^-13, which is likely dominated by the general relativistic orbital decay of the system. The effects of the orbital variability due to the redback nature of the pulsar are not needed to explain the observed orbital period derivative, but they are constrained to less than ~30% of the observed value. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 27, 2026