A dearth of young and bright massive stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud
A. Schootemeijer, N. Langer, D. Lennon, C. J. Evans, P. A. Crowther,, S. Geen, I. Howarth, A. de Koter, K.M. Menten, and J. S. Vink

TL;DR
This study reveals a surprising scarcity of young, luminous massive stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud, challenging existing models of star formation and evolution at low metallicity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the luminous star population in the SMC, highlighting a significant deficit of young massive stars and discussing potential astrophysical implications.
Findings
Only 30 very luminous main-sequence stars detected, fewer than expected.
Almost no stars above 20 Msol in the first half of hydrogen-burning phase.
The observed star distribution challenges standard star formation and evolution models.
Abstract
Massive star evolution at low metallicity is closely connected to many fields in high-redshift astrophysics, but poorly understood. The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) is a unique laboratory to study this because of its metallicity of 0.2 Zsol, its proximity, and because it is currently forming stars. We used a spectral type catalog in combination with GAIA magnitudes to calculate temperatures and luminosities of bright SMC stars. By comparing these with literature studies, we tested the validity of our method, and using GAIA data, we estimated the completeness of stars in the catalog as a function of luminosity. This allowed us to obtain a nearly complete view of the most luminous stars in the SMC. When then compared with stellar evolution predictions. We also calculated the extinction distribution, the ionizing photon production rate, and the star formation rate. Our results imply that…
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