Properties of intermediate- to high-mass stars in the young cluster M17 -- Characterizing the (pre-)zero-age main sequence
Frank Backs, S. A. Brands, M. C. Ram\'irez-Tannus, A. R. Derkink, A., de Koter, J. Poorta, J. Puls, and Lex Kaper

TL;DR
This study characterizes the properties of young, massive stars in M17, identifying their evolutionary stages, rotation, and mass-loss rates, and constraining the empirical zero-age main sequence for stars of 10-50 solar masses.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical constraints on the location of the ZAMS for massive stars and analyzes their rotation and mass-loss rates in a very young star-forming region.
Findings
Stars more massive than 10 M$_{\ m\odot}$ have reached the ZAMS.
Massive stars have ZAMS rotation rates up to 0.3 of the critical velocity.
A lag in formation is observed for more massive stars relative to lower mass stars.
Abstract
The outcome of the formation of massive stars is an important anchor point in their evolution. It provides insight into the physics of the assembly process, and sets the conditions for stellar evolution. We characterize a population of 18 highly reddened O4.5 to B9 stars in the very young massive star-forming region M17. Their properties allow us to identify the empirical location of the ZAMS, and rotation and mass-loss rate of stars there. We performed quantitative spectroscopic modeling of VLT/X-shooter spectra using NLTE atmosphere code Fastwind and fitting approach Kiwi-GA. The observed SEDs were used to determine the line-of-sight extinction. From a comparison of their positions in the HRD with MIST evolutionary tracks, we inferred the stellar masses and ages. We find an age of Myr for our sample, however we also identify a strong relation between the age and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
