Spectroscopic evolution of massive stars near the main sequence at low metallicity
F. Martins, A. Palacios (LUPM, CNRS & Montpellier University)

TL;DR
This study models the spectral evolution of massive stars at low metallicity, predicting their spectral types, phases, and spectral features, with implications for observing such stars in the Local Group.
Contribution
It provides synthetic spectra and evolutionary predictions for massive stars at Z=1/5 and 1/30 Zsun, highlighting metallicity effects on spectral types and phases.
Findings
Massive stars start as O2 dwarfs at low metallicity.
Lower metallicity increases the fraction of lifetime in the O2V phase.
Predicted spectra aid in identifying low-metallicity massive stars with upcoming instruments.
Abstract
We present synthetic spectra and SEDs computed along evolutionary tracks at Z=1/5 Zsun and Z=1/30 Zsun, for masses between 15 and 150 Msun. We predict that the most massive stars all start their evolution as O2 dwarfs at sub-solar metallicities. The fraction of lifetime spent in the O2V phase increases at lower metallicity. The distribution of dwarfs and giants we predict in the SMC accurately reproduces the observations. Supergiants appear at slightly higher effective temperatures than we predict. More massive stars enter the giant and supergiant phases closer to the ZAMS, but not as close as for solar metallicity. This is due to the reduced stellar winds at lower metallicity. Our models with masses higher than ~60 Msun should appear as O and B stars, whereas these objects are not observed, confirming a trend reported in the recent literature. At Z=1/30 Zsun, dwarfs cover a wider…
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