The R136 star cluster hosts several stars whose individual masses greatly exceed the accepted 150 Msun stellar mass limit
Paul A Crowther (Sheffield), Olivier Schnurr (Sheffield, AIP), Raphael, Hirschi (Keele, Tokyo), Norhasliza Yusof (Malaya), Richard J Parker, (Sheffield), Simon P Goodwin (Sheffield), Hasan Abu Kassim (Malaya)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the most massive stars in the R136 cluster, revealing some stars may significantly exceed the previously accepted 150 solar mass limit, with implications for stellar evolution and supernova models.
Contribution
It provides spectroscopic evidence that stars in R136 can have initial masses well above 150 Msun, challenging existing stellar mass limits and informing models of massive star evolution.
Findings
Stars in R136 have initial masses up to 320 Msun.
Some R136 stars are consistent with being colliding wind binaries.
The data supports a tentative upper mass limit of ~300 Msun for star formation.
Abstract
Spectroscopic analyses of H-rich WN5-6 stars within the young star clusters NGC 3603 and R136 are presented, using archival HST & VLT spectroscopy, & high spatial resolution near-IR photometry. We derive high T* for the WN stars in NGC 3603 (T*~42+/-2 kK) & R136 (T*~53+/-3 kK) plus clumping-corrected dM/dt ~ 2-5x10^-5 Msun/yr which closely agree with theoretical predictions. These stars make a disproportionate contribution to the global budget of their host clusters. R136a1 alone supplies ~7% of N(LyC) of the entire 30 Dor region. Comparisons with stellar models calculated for the main-sequence evolution of 85-500 Msun suggest ages of ~1.5 Myr & M_init in the range 105 - 170 Msun for 3 systems in NGC 3603, plus 165-320 Msun for 4 stars in R136. Our high stellar masses are supported by dynamical mass determinations for the components of NGC 3603 A1. We consider the predicted L_X of the…
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