X-Shooting ULLYSES: Massive stars at low metallicity XV. On the metallicity dependence of B-supergiant mass-loss rates
O. Verhamme, J.O. Sundqvist, A. de Koter, H. Sana, F. Backs, S. A. Brands, D. Debnath, N. Moens, P.Schillemans, C. Van der Sijpt, S. R. Berlanas, M. Bernini-Peron, P.A. Crowther, A. C. Gormaz-Matamala, R.Kuiper, C. Hawcroft, F. Najarro, D. Pauli, A.A.C. Sander, J.Th. van Loon

TL;DR
This study empirically investigates the metallicity dependence of B-supergiant mass-loss rates using UV and optical spectra, revealing a weaker dependence than models predict and no evidence of a bi-stability jump.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive empirical analysis of B-star wind properties across different metallicities, challenging existing mass-loss prescriptions.
Findings
Metallicity dependence in models overestimates empirical results.
No observed increase in mass-loss rate at spectral type B1.
Approximately 40% of wind mass is in the medium between clumps.
Abstract
Context. For stellar evolution models we rely on mass-loss rate prescriptions that show features that lack empirical confirmation, such as the bi-stability jump. This jump is an increase in mass loss in the decreasing temperature regime Teff 28-21 kK. Although papers compared empirical results to prescriptions,a large observational sample of B stars for which the wind has been scrutinised over different metallicities is still lacking. Aims. By modelling of both ultraviolet (ULLYSES) and optical (XShootU) spectra, we determined the stellar and wind parameters, of 24 SMC B stars ranging in Teff from 13 to 29 kK. By combining this sample with LMC studies, we compared the wind behaviour of B stars in two different metallicity regimes. We compared our results to common mass-loss rate prescriptions to test features present in these models and their metallicity dependence. Methods. We have…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
