Clumping and X-Rays in cooler B supergiant stars
Matheus Bernini-Peron, Wagner L.F. Marcolino, Andreas A.C. Sander,, Jean-Claude Bouret, Varsha Ramachandran, Julian Saling, Fabian R.N., Schneider, Lidia M. Oskinova, and Francisco Najarro

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that including wind clumping and X-ray emission in spectral models allows for accurate reproduction of UV spectral lines in cooler B supergiant stars, shedding light on their wind properties and evolutionary status.
Contribution
It is the first to successfully reproduce key UV lines in cooler B supergiants by incorporating wind clumping and X-rays into spectral models.
Findings
Good agreement between synthetic and observed spectra when including clumping and X-rays.
Moderately clumped winds with f_infty > 0.5 are necessary for accurate modeling.
X-ray luminosities are lower than typical ratios, indicating less structured winds.
Abstract
B supergiants (BSGs) are evolved stars with effective temperatures between 10 to 30 kK and are important to understand massive star evolution. Located on the edge of the line-driven wind regime, the study of their atmospheres is helpful to understand phenomena such as the bi-stability jump. Key UV features of their spectra have so far not been reproduced by models for types later than B1. Here, we aim to remedy this situation via spectral analysis that accounts for wind clumping and X-rays. In addition, we investigate the evolutionary status of our sample stars based on the obtained stellar parameters. We determined parameters via quantitative spectroscopy using CMFGEN and PoWR codes. The models were compared to UV and optical data of four BSGs: HD206165, HD198478, HD53138, and HD164353. We also study the evolutionary status of our sample using GENEC and MESA tracks. When including…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
