X-Shooting ULLYSES: Massive stars at low metallicity VI. Atmosphere and mass-loss properties of O-type giants in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Frank Backs, S. A. Brands, A. de Koter, L. Kaper, J. S. Vink, J. Puls,, J. Sundqvist, F. Tramper, H. Sana, M. Bernini-Peron, J. M. Bestenlehner, P., A. Crowther, C. Hawcroft, R. Ignace, R. Kuiper, J. Th. van Loon, L. Mahy, W., Marcolino, F. Najarro, L. M. Oskinova, D. Pauli

TL;DR
This study investigates the atmosphere and mass-loss properties of O-type giants in the Small Magellanic Cloud, revealing how wind clumping and mass-loss rates depend on metallicity and luminosity, with implications for stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It provides new empirical measurements of wind clumping and mass-loss scaling with metallicity at low Z, highlighting a luminosity-dependent variation in the metallicity scaling exponent.
Findings
Wind clumping factors range from 2 to 30.
Mass-loss rate scales with metallicity as Z^1.02 at high luminosity.
Steeper metallicity dependence (Z^>2) at lower luminosities.
Abstract
Mass loss through a stellar wind is an important physical process that steers the evolution of massive stars and controls the properties of their end-of-life products, such as the supernova type and the mass of compact remnants. For an accurate mass loss determination, the inhomogeneities in the wind, known as clumping, needs to be taking into account. We aim to improve empirical estimates of mass loss and wind clumping for hot main-sequence massive stars, study the dependence of both properties on the metallicity, and compare the theoretical predictions to our findings. We analyzed the optical and UV spectra of 13 O-type stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud galaxy, which has a metallicity of . We quantified the stellar atmosphere, outflow, and wind-clumping properties. To probe the role of metallicity, we compared our findings to studies of Galactic and Large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
