Very massive stars at low metallicity: evolution, synthetic spectroscopy, and impact on the integrated light of starbursts
F. Martins (1), A. Palacios (1), D. Schaerer (2), R. Marques-Chaves (2) ((1) LUPM, CNRS & University of Montpellier, (2) University of Geneva)

TL;DR
This study models very massive stars at low metallicity to understand their evolution, spectral features, and impact on starburst light, highlighting the importance of mass loss assumptions on their observable properties.
Contribution
It introduces evolutionary and synthetic spectral models of very massive stars at low metallicity considering different mass loss rate assumptions, and assesses their influence on starburst spectra.
Findings
VMS remain hot with no Z dependence in mass loss
HeII 1640 emission appears in most VMS evolutionary phases
Adding VMS increases ionising photons, affecting starburst UV spectra
Abstract
We study the spectroscopic appearance of very massive stars and their effect on the integrated light of starbursts at low metallicity (Z). We adopt two frameworks for the mass loss rates of VMS: in one case we assume no Z dependence, in the other case we assume a linear scaling with Z. We compute evolutionary models for masses 150, 200, 250 and 300 Msun at Z=0.2, 0.1 and 0.01 Zsun. We compute the associated synthetic spectra at selected points along the evolutionary tracks. Finally we build population synthesis models including VMS. We find that the evolution of VMS critically depends on the assumptions regarding mass loss rates. In case of no Z dependence VMS remain hot for all their lifetime. Conversely when mass loss rates are reduced because of lower Z VMS follow a classical evolution towards the red part of the HR diagram. VMS display HeII 1640 emission in most phases of their…
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