Inferring the presence of very massive stars in local star-forming regions
Fabrice Martins (1), Daniel Schaerer (2,3), Rui Marques-Chaves (2),, Ankur Upadhyaya (2) ((1) LUPM, CNRS & Montpellier University, (2) Geneva, University, (3) IRAP, CNRS)

TL;DR
This study develops methods to detect very massive stars in local star-forming regions using UV and optical spectra, highlighting the importance of optical diagnostics and improved population synthesis models.
Contribution
It introduces empirical criteria and enhanced models for identifying VMS, demonstrating their presence in some local regions and improving spectral interpretation techniques.
Findings
Optical spectra, especially the blue bump, are crucial for distinguishing VMS from WR stars.
Some local star-forming regions show clear signatures of VMS presence.
Current models like BPASS struggle to reproduce certain VMS spectral features.
Abstract
We present a study aiming at detecting VMS in local star-forming region from the imprint they leave on the integrated UV and optical light. We analyzed a sample of 27 star-forming regions and galaxies in the local Universe. We selected sources with a metallicity close to that of the LMC. We defined empirical criteria to distinguish sources dominated by VMS and Wolf-Rayet stars (WR), using template spectra of VMS- and WR-dominated regions. We subsequently built population synthesis models with an updated treatment of VMS. We show that the UV range alone is not sufficient to distinguish between VMS- and WR-dominated sources. The region of the WR bumps in the optical breaks the degeneracy. In particular, the morphology of the blue bump at 4640-4686 A is a key diagnostic. Beyond the prototypical R136 region we identify two galaxies showing clear signatures of VMS. In two other galaxies or…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
