A Multiwavelength Study of Evolved Massive Stars in the Galactic Center
H. Dong (NOAO, UMass), Q. D. Wang (UMass), M. R. Morris (UCLA)

TL;DR
This study conducts a comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of 180 evolved massive stars in the Galactic Center, revealing their properties, dust emission, and spatial distribution, and providing insights into their role in galactic dust production.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed multi-wavelength characterization of evolved massive stars in the Galactic Center, including new dust mass estimates and spatial distribution insights.
Findings
Identification of 10 foreground sources, including potential cataclysmic variables.
Correlation between Pa-a equivalent width and continuum in WN stars.
WC stars in the Quintuplet cluster can have dust masses exceeding 1e-5 M.
Abstract
The central region of the Milky Way provides a unique laboratory for a systematic, spatially-resolved population study of evolved massive stars of various types in a relatively high metallicity environment. We have conducted a multi-wavelength data analysis of 180 such stars or candidates, most of which were drawn from a recent large-scale HST/NICMOS narrow-band Pa-a survey, plus additional 14 Wolf-Rayet stars identified in earlier ground-based spectroscopic observations of the same field. The multi-wavelength data include broad-band IR photometry measurements from HST/NICMOS, SIRIUS, 2MASS, Spitzer/IRAC, and Chandra X-ray observations. We correct for extinctions toward individual stars, improve the Pa-a line equivalent width measurements, quantify the substantial mid-IR dust emission associated with WC stars, and find X-ray counterparts. In the process, we identify 10 foreground…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
