The properties of ten O-type stars in the low-metallicity galaxies IC 1613, WLM and NGC 3109
F. Tramper, H. Sana, A. de Koter, L. Kaper, and O. H. Ramirez-Agudelo

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of ten O-type stars in low-metallicity galaxies, revealing that their stellar winds are stronger than current models predict, which challenges existing theories of massive star evolution.
Contribution
It extends previous research by analyzing four additional low-metallicity O stars, deriving their parameters, and comparing them to theoretical models, highlighting discrepancies in wind strength predictions.
Findings
Stellar masses up to 50 solar masses.
Wind strengths are stronger than predicted by models.
Indications of higher iron content in host galaxies.
Abstract
Massive stars likely played an important role in the reionization of the Universe, and the formation of the first black holes. Massive stars in low-metallicity environments in the local Universe are reminiscent of their high redshift counterparts. In a previous paper, we reported on indications that the stellar winds of low-metallicity O stars may be stronger than predicted, which would challenge the current paradigm of massive star evolution. In this paper, we aim to extend our initial sample of six O stars in low-metallicity environments by four. We aim to derive their stellar and wind parameters, and compare these to radiation-driven wind theory and stellar evolution models. We have obtained intermediate-resolution VLT/X-Shooter spectra of our sample of stars. We derive the stellar parameters by fitting synthetic fastwind line profiles to the VLT/X-Shooter spectra using a genetic…
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