X-ray properties of early-type stars in the Tarantula Nebula from T-ReX
Paul A Crowther (Sheffield), Patrick S Broos (PSU), Leisa K Townsley, (PSU), Andy M T Pollock (Sheffield), Katie A Tehrani (Sheffield), Marc Gagne, (West Chester)

TL;DR
This study revisits the X-ray to bolometric luminosity ratio for early-type stars in the Tarantula Nebula, finding it consistent with Galactic stars and suggesting metallicity has little effect on this relation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of X-ray properties of massive stars in the Tarantula Nebula, updating the $L_{X}/L_{Bol}$ relation with new data and comparisons across different environments.
Findings
Average $ ext{log} L_{X}/L_{Bol} ext{ } ext{~} -6.90$ for 107 sources.
Excluding extreme and complex systems, $ ext{log} L_{X}/L_{Bol} ext{ } ext{~} -7.00$, consistent with Galactic OB stars.
No significant difference in X-ray properties between single and binary stars, or different spectral types.
Abstract
We reassess the historical relation for early-type stars from a comparison between T-ReX, the Chandra ACIS X-ray survey of the Tarantula Nebula in the LMC, and contemporary spectroscopic analysis of massive stars obtained primarily from VLT/FLAMES, VLT/MUSE and HST/STIS surveys. For 107 sources in common (some host to multiple stars), the majority of which are bolometrically luminous (40% exceed ), we find an average . Excluding extreme systems Mk 34 (WN5h+WN5h), R140a (WC4+WN6+) and VFTS 399 (O9 IIIn+?), plus four WR sources with anomalously hard X-ray components (R130, R134, R135, Mk 53) and 10 multiple sources within the spatially crowded core of R136a, , in good agreement with Galactic OB stars. No difference is found between single and binary systems, nor between O, Of/WN and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
