Massive stars in extremely metal-poor galaxies: A window into the past
M. Garcia, C. J. Evans, J. M. Bestenlehner, J.C. Bouret, N. Castro, M., Cervi\~no, A. W. Fullerton, M. Gieles, A. Herrero, A. de Koter, D. J. Lennon,, J. Th. van Loon, F. Martins, S. E. de Mink, F. Najarro, I. Negueruela, H., Sana, S. Sim\'on-D\'iaz, D. Sz\'ecsi, F. Tramper

TL;DR
This paper reviews our current understanding of massive stars in extremely metal-poor galaxies, emphasizing the need for advanced observational tools to explore their properties and roles in cosmic history, especially in the early universe.
Contribution
It highlights the limitations of current models based on the Small Magellanic Cloud and advocates for new observational missions to study the most metal-poor stars.
Findings
Current knowledge is limited to one metallicity point.
Massive stars in extremely metal-poor galaxies are crucial for understanding early universe.
Proposes a new observational approach with large space telescopes.
Abstract
Cosmic History has witnessed the lives and deaths of multiple generations of massive stars, all of them invigorating their host galaxies with ionizing photons, kinetic energy, fresh material and stellar-mass black holes. Ubiquitous engines as they are, Astrophysics needs a good understanding of their formation, evolution, properties and yields throughout the history of the Universe, and with decreasing metal content mimicking the environment at the earliest epochs. Ultimately, a physical model that could be extrapolated to zero metallicity would enable tackling long-standing questions such as "What did the First, very massive stars of the Universe look like?" or "What was their role in the re-ionization of the Universe?". Yet, most our knowledge of metal-poor massive stars is drawn from one single point in metallicity. Massive stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC, $\sim 1/5…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
