Analysis of Galactic late-type O dwarfs: more constraints on the weak wind problem
W. L. F. Marcolino, J.-C. Bouret, F. Martins, D. J. Hillier, T. Lanz,, C. Escolano

TL;DR
This study investigates late-type O dwarf stars to better understand the weak wind problem, finding observed mass-loss rates significantly lower than theoretical predictions, thus challenging existing stellar wind models.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on stellar wind rates in late-type O dwarfs, confirming the weak wind problem and testing the limits of theoretical models.
Findings
Observed mass-loss rates are about 2 orders of magnitude lower than Vink predictions.
Weak wind signatures are confirmed in CIV 1549 and other lines, supporting the reality of weak winds.
The modified wind momentum-luminosity relation steepens or breaks at low luminosities.
Abstract
We have investigated the stellar and wind properties of a sample of five late-type O dwarfs in order to address the weak wind problem. A grid of TLUSTY models was used to obtain the stellar parameters, and the wind parameters were determined by using the CMFGEN code. We found that the spectra have mainly a photospheric origin. A weak wind signature is seen in CIV 1549, from where mass-loss rates consistent with previous CMFGEN results regarding O8-9V stars were obtained. A discrepancy of roughly 2 orders of magnitude is found between these mass-loss rates and the values predicted by theory (Mdot(Vink)), confirming a breakdown or a steepening of the modified wind momentum-luminosity relation at log L/Lsun < 5.2. We have estimated the carbon abundance for the stars of our sample and concluded that its uncertainty cannot cause the weak wind problem. Upper limits on Mdot were established…
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