Observations of Extremely Metal-Poor O Stars: Weak Winds and Constraints for Evolution Models
O. Grace Telford, John Chisholm, Andreas A. C. Sander, Varsha, Ramachandran, Kristen B. W. McQuinn, Danielle A. Berg

TL;DR
This study presents optical and ultraviolet observations of extremely metal-poor O stars, revealing weak stellar winds and discrepancies with existing stellar evolution models, thereby challenging current understanding of low-metallicity massive star feedback.
Contribution
It provides new empirical data on low-metallicity O stars, highlighting inconsistencies with models and emphasizing the need to validate stellar parameters at very low metallicities.
Findings
Stars have effective temperatures consistent with spectral types.
Observed low mass-loss rates conflict with model predictions.
Evolution models struggle to reproduce observed stellar parameters.
Abstract
Metal-poor massive stars drive the evolution of low-mass galaxies, both locally and at high redshift. However, quantifying the feedback they impart to their local surroundings remains uncertain because models of stellar evolution, mass loss, and ionizing spectra are unconstrained by observations below 20% solar metallicity (). We present new Keck Cosmic Web Imager optical spectroscopy of three O stars in the nearby dwarf galaxies Leo P, Sextans A, and WLM, which have gas-phase oxygen abundances of 3-14% . To characterize their fundamental stellar properties and radiation-driven winds, we fit PoWR atmosphere models to the optical spectra simultaneously with Hubble Space Telescope far-ultraviolet (FUV) spectra and multi-wavelength photometry. We find that all three stars have effective temperatures consistent with their spectral types and surface gravities typical of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
