The Vast Population of Wolf-Rayet and Red Supergiant Stars in M101: I. Motivation and First Results
Michael M. Shara, Joanne L. Bibby, David Zurek, Paul A. Crowther,, Anthony F.J. Moffat, and Laurent Drissen

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope imaging to identify and analyze the distribution of Wolf-Rayet and Red Supergiant stars in M101, providing insights into massive star evolution and supernova progenitors.
Contribution
First deep, high-resolution survey of massive star populations in M101, identifying thousands of WR and RSG candidates and analyzing their spatial distribution.
Findings
WR stars are concentrated in the galaxy's core regions.
RSG stars are predominantly found in the galaxy's halo.
The survey demonstrates the feasibility of identifying massive star candidates in external galaxies.
Abstract
M101 is an ideal target in which to test predictions of massive star birth and evolution. The large abundance gradient across M101 (a factor of 20) suggests that many more WR stars must be found in the inner parts of this galaxy than in the outer regions. Many HII regions and massive star-forming complexes have been identified in M101; they should be rich in WR stars, and surrounded by RSG stars. Finally, the Wolf-Rayet stars in M101 may be abundant enough for one to explode as a Type Ib or Ic supernova and/or GRB within a generation. The clear identification of the progenitor of a Type Ib or Ic supernova as a WR star would be a major confirmation of current stellar evolution theory. Motivated by these considerations, we have used the Hubble Space Telescope to carry out a deep, HeII optical narrowband imaging survey of the massive star populations in the ScI spiral galaxy M101.…
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