Narrow He II emission in star-forming galaxies at low metallicity. Stellar wind emission from a population of Very Massive Stars
G. Gr\"afener, J.S. Vink

TL;DR
This paper proposes that very massive stars at low metallicity, rather than Population III stars, can explain narrow HeII emission in star-forming galaxies, impacting how we interpret stellar populations.
Contribution
It introduces a new scenario where very massive stars produce narrow HeII emission, challenging the need for PopIII stars at moderate redshifts.
Findings
HeII line fluxes from VMS match observations
VMS can produce strong, slow stellar winds at low Z
Implications for high-redshift galaxy studies with JWST
Abstract
In a recent study star-forming galaxies with HeII emission between redshifts 2 and 4.6 have been found to occur in two modes, distinguished by the width of their HeII emission lines. Broad HeII emission has been attributed to stellar emission from a population of evolved Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars while narrow HeII emission has been attributed to nebular emission excited by a population of very hot PopIII stars formed in pockets of pristine gas at moderate redshifts. In this work we propose an alternative scenario for the origin of the narrow HeII emission, namely very massive stars (VMS) at low metallicity (Z) which form strong but slow WR-type stellar winds due to their proximity to the Eddington limit. We estimate the expected HeII line fluxes and equivalent widths based on wind models for VMS and population synthesis models, and compare the results with recent observations of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
