A dearth of OH/IR stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Steven R. Goldman, Jacco Th. van Loon, Jos\'e F. G\'omez, James A., Green, Albert A. Zijlstra, Ambra Nanni, Hiroshi Imai, Patricia A. Whitelock,, Martin A. T. Groenewegen, Joana M. Oliveira

TL;DR
This study conducted deep radio observations of AGB stars and RSGs in the Small Magellanic Cloud but found no OH maser emissions, suggesting metallicity impacts maser occurrence.
Contribution
It provides the first deep survey of OH masers in the SMC and introduces a statistical method to assess non-detections in relation to metallicity effects.
Findings
No OH maser emission detected despite deep observations.
Metallicity reduction may inhibit dusty wind phases in evolved stars.
Conditions in circumstellar envelopes differ beyond simple abundance scaling.
Abstract
We present the results of targeted observations and a survey of 1612-, 1665-, and 1667-MHz circumstellar OH maser emission from asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and red supergiants (RSGs) in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), using the Parkes and Australia Telescope Compact Array radio telescopes. No clear OH maser emission has been detected in any of our observations targeting luminous, long-period, large-amplitude variable stars, which have been confirmed spectroscopically and photometrically to be mid- to late-M spectral type. These observations have probed 3 - 4 times deeper than any OH maser survey in the SMC. Using a bootstrapping method with LMC and Galactic OH/IR star samples and our SMC observation upper limits, we have calculated the likelihood of not detecting maser emission in any of the two sources considered to be the top maser candidates to be less than 0.05%, assuming…
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