Bibcode
Cerviño, M.; Luridiana, V.; Pérez, E.; Vílchez, J. M.; Valls-Gabaud, D.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.407, p.177-190 (2003)
Advertised on:
8
2003
Journal
Citations
35
Refereed citations
30
Description
Stellar clusters with the same general physical properties (e.g., total
mass, age, and star-formation mode) may have very different stellar mass
spectra due to the incomplete sampling of the underlying mass function;
such differences are especially relevant in the high-mass tail of the
mass function due to the smaller absolute number of massive stars. Since
the ionising spectra of star-forming regions are mainly produced by
massive stars and their by-products, the dispersion in the number of
massive stars across individual clusters also produces a dispersion in
the properties of the corresponding ionising spectra. This implies that
regions with the same physical properties may produce very different
emission line spectra, and occupy different positions in emission-line
diagnostic diagrams. In this paper, we lay the basis for a future
analysis of this effect by evaluating the dispersion in the ionising
fluxes of synthetic spectra computed with evolutionary models. As an
important consequence of the explicit consideration of sampling effects,
we found that the intensities of synthetic fluxes at different
ionisation edges are strongly correlated, a fact suggesting that no
additional dispersion will result from the inclusion of sampling effects
in the analysis of diagnostic diagrams; this is true for H Ii regions on
all scales, those ionised by single massive stars through those ionised
by super stellar clusters. This finding is especially relevant in
consideration of the fact that real H Ii regions are found in a band
sensibly narrower than predicted by standard methods. Additionally, we
find convincing suggestions that the He Ii line intensities are strongly
affected by sampling, especially during the WR phase, and so cannot be
used to constrain the evolutionary status of stellar clusters. We also
establish the range of applicability of synthesis models set by the
Lowest Luminosity Limit for the ionising flux, that is the lowest limit
in cluster mass for which synthesis models can be applied to predict
ionising spectra. This limit marks the boundary between the situations
in which the ionising flux is better modeled with a single star as
opposed to a star cluster; this boundary depends on the metallicity and
age of the stellar population, ranging from 103 to more than
106 Msun in the case of a single burst event. As a
consequence, synthesis models should not be used to try to account for
the properties of clusters with smaller masses.