Constraining the population of isolated massive stars within the Central Molecular Zone
J. S. Clark, L. R. Patrick, F. Najarro, C. J. Evans, M. E. Lohr

TL;DR
This study identifies and analyzes a large, previously underestimated population of isolated massive stars in the Milky Way's Central Molecular Zone, revealing their potential impact on the galaxy's nuclear evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first homogeneous spectroscopic classification of isolated massive stars in the CMZ, highlighting their significance and the likely undercount in previous surveys.
Findings
83 isolated massive stars identified in the CMZ.
Population of massive stars comparable to known clusters.
Over 320 stars expected to undergo core collapse in 20 million years.
Abstract
Many galaxies host pronounced circumnuclear starbursts, fuelled by infalling gas. Such activity is expected to drive the secular evolution of the nucleus and generate super winds, while the intense radiation fields and extreme gas and cosmic ray densities present may act to modify the outcome of star formation with respect to more quiescent galactic regions. The centre of the Milky Way is the only example of this phenomenon where, by virtue of its proximity, individual stars may be resolved. Previous studies have revealed that it hosts a rich population of massive stars; these are located within three clusters, with an additional contingent dispersed throughout the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ). We employed VLT+KMOS to obtain homogeneous, high S/N spectroscopy of the later cohort for classification and quantitative analysis. Including previously identified examples, we found a total of…
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