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Creators/Authors contains: "Yoos, Stella"

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  1. Although we have been able to develop an understanding of many aspects of stellar evolution and formation, a few key gaps remain. One is the fate of massive binary star systems composed of Wolf-Rayet (WR) and O-type stars. In these WR + O binaries, the stellar winds surrounding these stars collide, creating a complex interaction region in which light from the stars scatters and becomes polarized. To study these scattering regions, I employ a technique that allows me to map the polarization of the light emitted from these stars and track its variation over the binary orbit. I found that although we have some models for this behavior, they do not fully reproduce the observed data, suggesting these systems are more complex that previously known. The unexplained behaviors give clues to the complexity of these systems and shows how these models can be improved upon in the future. Understanding the structure and evolution of this scattering region could be the key to understanding the lives and eventual deaths of these stars. 
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  2. https://www.bhsu.edu/Research/CUWiP#Home-1947 
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  3. Massive Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars in binary systems may produce supernovae capable of emitting long-duration gamma-ray bursts (LGRB). The canonical WR+O eclipsing binary is V444 Cygni, which is a WN5+O system that has X-ray emitting colliding winds and a well-constrained geometry. I will present new time-dependent spectropolarimetric data, collected using RSS at the Southern African Large Telescope, from several southern WN+O binary systems that may be analogs to V444 Cygni. By analyzing their polarimetric variations with respect to V444 Cygni, I investigate their wind geometries and assess the similarities among the WN subclass. Characterizing the mass loss and transfer structures within these systems will help to constrain the future evolution of these WN stars and their roles as LGRB prognitors 
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