Stellar and Wind Properties of LMC WC4 stars - A metallicity dependence for Wolf-Rayet mass-loss rates
Paul A. Crowther (UCL), Luc Dessart (Utrecht), D. John Hillier, (Pittsburgh), Jay B. Abbott (UCL), Alex W. Fullerton (JHU)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the physical properties of LMC WC4 Wolf-Rayet stars using advanced spectroscopy and models, revealing metallicity-dependent differences in stellar winds and implications for supernova progenitors.
Contribution
It provides revised stellar parameters for LMC WC4 stars using improved observations and models, highlighting metallicity effects on mass-loss rates and spectral classification.
Findings
LMC WC4 stars have higher luminosities than Galactic counterparts.
Spectral type sensitivity is mainly due to wind density, not temperature or carbon abundance.
Pre-supernova masses suggest potential progenitors of Type-Ic supernovae.
Abstract
We use ultraviolet space-based (FUSE, HST) and optical/IR ground-based (2.3m MSSSO, NTT) spectroscopy to determine the physical parameters of six WC4-type Wolf-Rayet stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Stellar parameters are revised significantly relative to Grafener et al. (1998) based on improved observations and more sophisticated model atmosphere codes, which account for line blanketing and clumping. We find that stellar luminosities are revised upwards by up to 0.4 dex, with surface abundances spanning a lower range of 0.1<C/He<0.35 (20-45% carbon by mass) and O/He<0.06 (<10% oxygen by mass). Relative to Galactic WC5-8 stars at known distance, and analysed in a similar manner, LMC WC4 stars possess systematically higher stellar luminosities, 0.2dex lower wind densities, yet a similar range of surface chemistries. We illustrate how the classification CIII 5696 line is extremely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
