The Physical Properties and Effective Temperature Scale of O-type Stars as a Function of Metallicity. III. More Results from the Magellanic Clouds
Philip Massey, Amanda M. Zangari, Nidia I. Morrell, Joachim Puls,, Kathleen DeGioia-Eastwood, Fabio Bresolin, and Rolf-Peter Kudrtizki

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality spectra of O and early B stars in the Magellanic Clouds to refine their physical properties and temperature scale as a function of metallicity, comparing different modeling methods and addressing the mass discrepancy.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the effective temperature scale of massive stars in low-metallicity environments and compares results from multiple modeling approaches, highlighting systematic differences.
Findings
Good agreement with previous temperature scale
Automatic modeling tends to produce hotter temperatures
Some stars show significant mass discrepancies
Abstract
In order to better determine the physical properties of hot, massive stars as a function of metallicity, we obtained very high SNR optical spectra of 26 O and early B stars in the Magellanic Clouds. These allow accurate modeling even in cases where the He I 4471 line has an equivalent width of only a few tens of mA. The spectra were modeled with FASTWIND, with good fits obtained for 18 stars; the remainder show signatures of being binaries. We include stars in common to recent studies to investigate possible systematic differences. The "automatic" FASTWIND modeling method of Mokiem and collaborators produced temperatures 1100 K hotter on the average, presumably due to the different emphasis given to various temperature-sensitive lines. More significant, however, is that the automatic method always produced some "best" answer, even for stars we identify as composite (binaries). The…
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