Mass loss from hot massive stars
J. Puls, J. S. Vink, F. Najarro

TL;DR
This review discusses the theoretical and observational understanding of radiation-driven mass loss in massive stars, addressing wind models, diagnostics, challenges like clumping, and implications for stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of wind models, diagnostics, and recent challenges such as wind clumping and weak winds, integrating new observational and theoretical insights.
Findings
Clumping can cause overestimation of mass-loss rates by factors of 2 to 10.
Weak winds are difficult to measure but are crucial for understanding stellar evolution.
X-ray line emission analysis offers new clues about wind clumping.
Abstract
Mass loss is a key process in the evolution of massive stars, and must be understood quantitatively to be successfully included in broader astrophysical applications. In this review, we discuss various aspects of radiation driven mass loss, both from the theoretical and the observational side. We focus on winds from OB-stars, with some excursions to the Luminous Blue Variables, Wolf- Rayet stars, A-supergiants and Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae. After reca- pitulating the 1-D, stationary standard model of line-driven wind, extensions accounting for rotation and magnetic fields are discussed. The relevance of the so-called bi-stability jump is outlined. We summarize diagnostical methods to infer wind properties from observations, and compare the results with theore- tical predictions, featuring the massloss-metallicity dependence. Subsequently, we concentrate on two urgent problems…
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