Evolved Supergiants in PHANGS I: Red Supergiants in 19 Galaxies between 5-20 Mpc with HST and JWST
Sumit K. Sarbadhicary, David Thilker, Adam K. Leroy, Janice C. Lee, Amirnezam Amiri, Gagandeep S. Anand, Ashley. T. Barnes, M\'ed\'eric Boquien, Daniel A. Dale, Simthembile Dlamini, Simon C. O. Glover, Ralf S. Klessen, Kirsten L. Larson, Daniel Maschmann, Hsi-An Pan, Jiayi Sun

TL;DR
This study leverages HST and JWST data to identify and catalog nearly 97,000 red supergiants across 19 galaxies up to 20 Mpc away, revealing their distribution and relation to star formation.
Contribution
It presents the largest single-survey catalog of extragalactic RSGs, demonstrating the effectiveness of combined HST and JWST observations for stellar population studies beyond the Local Group.
Findings
RSGs are concentrated in star-forming regions like spiral arms.
Number density of RSGs correlates strongly with local star formation rate.
Approximately one RSG per 10^3.77 solar masses of young stellar populations.
Abstract
Red supergiants (RSGs) are important for our understanding of supernova progenitors, stellar populations, stellar evolution, mass loss and dust production. Extragalactic surveys of RSGs have a long history in the Local Group, but few studies exist beyond that due to the limited resolution and sensitivity of ground-based and previous space-based infrared observatories. Here we demonstrate the combined power of HST and JWST to push systematic searches of RSGs out to 20 Mpc. We introduce a catalog of 97057 RSGs -- the largest single-survey release of RSGs -- with masses 10 M in 19 galaxies from the PHANGS HST+JWST Treasury program. We use HST F814W and JWST F200W photometry to select stars as RSGs based on predicted colors and magnitudes from PARSEC isochrones. The spatial distribution of our recovered RSGs follow the familiar pattern of mostly being concentrated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
