The R136 star cluster dissected with Hubble Space Telescope/STIS. I. Far-ultraviolet spectroscopic census and the origin of HeII 1640 in young star clusters
Paul A. Crowther, S.M. Caballero-Nieves, K.A. Bostroem, J. Maiz, Apellaniz, F.R.N. Schneider, N.R. Walborn, C.R. Angus, I. Brott, A. Bonanos,, A. de Koter, S.E. de Mink, C.J. Evans, G. Grafener, A. Herrero, I.D. Howarth,, N. Langer, D.J. Lennon, J. Puls, H. Sana, J.S. Vink

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble's STIS instrument to spectroscopically analyze the R136 star cluster, revealing the dominant role of very massive stars in producing HeII 1640 emission and providing detailed classifications and a Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
Contribution
First comprehensive far-ultraviolet spectroscopic census of R136, classifying most bright sources and linking HeII 1640 emission to very massive stars beyond 100 solar masses.
Findings
Most luminous stars dominate HeII 1640 emission.
Cluster age estimated at 1.5 million years.
Spectroscopic classifications of all R136a members obtained.
Abstract
We introduce a HST/STIS stellar census of R136a, the central ionizing star cluster of 30 Doradus. We present low resolution far-ultraviolet STIS/MAMA spectroscopy of R136 using 17 contiguous 52x0.2 arcsec slits which together provide complete coverage of the central 0.85 parsec (3.4 arcsec). We provide spectral types of 90% of the 57 sources brighter than m_F555W = 16.0 mag within a radius of 0.5 parsec of R136a1, plus 8 additional nearby sources including R136b (O4\,If/WN8). We measure wind velocities for 52 early-type stars from CIV 1548-51, including 16 O2-3 stars. For the first time we spectroscopically classify all Weigelt & Baier members of R136a, which comprise three WN5 stars (a1-a3), two O supergiants (a5-a6) and three early O dwarfs (a4, a7, a8). A complete Hertzsprung-Russell diagram for the most massive O stars in R136 is provided, from which we obtain a cluster age of…
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