Sub-surface convection zones in hot massive stars and their observable consequences
M. Cantiello, N. Langer, I. Brott, A. de Koter, S. N. Shore, J. S., Vink, A. Voegler, D. J. Lennon, S.-C. Yoon

TL;DR
This study investigates iron and helium ionization-driven convection zones in hot massive stars, linking their properties to observable phenomena like microturbulence, pulsations, and wind clumping, with implications for stellar magnetic fields.
Contribution
It provides a detailed mapping of the iron convection zone's occurrence across stellar parameters and connects these zones to various observable stellar phenomena.
Findings
Iron convection zone is more prominent at higher luminosity and metallicity.
Empirical microturbulence velocities support a link to sub-photospheric convection.
Clumping and magnetic features may originate from the FeCZ.
Abstract
We study the convection zones in the outer envelope of hot massive stars which are caused by opacity peaks associated with iron and helium ionization. We determine the occurrence and properties of these convection zones as function of the stellar parameters. We then confront our results with observations of OB stars. A stellar evolution code is used to compute a grid of massive star models at different metallicities. In these models, the mixing length theory is used to characterize the envelope convection zones. We find the iron convection zone (FeCZ) to be more prominent for lower surface gravity, higher luminosity and higher initial metallicity. It is absent for luminosities below about , , and \Lsun$ for the Galaxy, LMC and SMC, respectively. We map the strength of the FeCZ on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram for three metallicities, and compare…
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