Upper Mass-Loss Limits and Clumping in the Intermediate and Outer Wind Regions of OB stars
M. M. Rubio-D\'iez, J. O. Sundqvist, F. Najarro, A. Traficante, J., Puls, L. Calzoletti, D. Figer

TL;DR
This study investigates the radial clumping structure of OB star winds to establish upper limits on mass-loss rates, revealing significant reductions needed in stellar evolution models, especially for B supergiants.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical constraints on the radial stratification of wind clumping and mass-loss rates in OB stars using multi-wavelength data and far-infrared observations.
Findings
Clumping decreases or remains constant with radius in most OB stars.
Maximum mass-loss rates for B supergiants are at least ten times lower than theoretical predictions.
Mass-loss rate reductions could be up to 6-200 times for B supergiants in stellar evolution models.
Abstract
We probe the radial clumping stratification of OB stars in the intermediate and outer wind regions (r>~2 R*) to derive upper limits for mass-loss rates, and compare to current mass-loss implementation. Together with archival multi-wavelength data, our new far-infrared continuum observations for a sample of 25 OB stars (including 13 B Supergiants) uniquely constrain the clumping properties of the intermediate wind region. We derive the minimum radial stratification of the clumping factor through the stellar wind, fclmin(r), and the corresponding maximum mass-loss rate, Mdotmax, normalising clumping factors to the outermost wind region (clfar=1). The clumping degree for r>~2 R* decreases or stays constant with increasing radius for almost the whole sample. There is a dependence on luminosity class and spectral type at the intermediate region relative to the outer ones: O Supergiants…
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