Bibcode
Simón-Díaz, S.; Herrero, A.; Sabín-Sanjulián, C.; Najarro, F.; Garcia, M.; Puls, J.; Castro, N.; Evans, C. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 570, id.L6, 4 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
10
2014
Revista
Número de citas
27
Número de citas referidas
20
Descripción
Context. We are now in an era of large spectroscopic surveys of OB-type
stars. Quantitative spectroscopic analysis of these modern datasets is
enabling us to review the physical properties of blue massive stars with
robust samples, not only revisiting mean properties and general trends,
but also incorporating information about the effects of second-order
parameters. Aims: We investigate the spectral type - effective
temperature (SpT - Teff) calibration for O-type dwarfs and
its claimed dependence on metallicity, using statistically meaningful
samples of stars extracted from the IACOB and VFTS surveys.
Methods: We performed a homogeneous differential spectroscopic analysis
of 33 Galactic and 53 LMC O dwarfs (spanning spectral types of O4 -
O9.7) using the iacob-gbat package, a χ2-fitting
algorithm based on a large pre-computed grid of fastwind models, and
standard techniques for the hydrogen/helium analysis of O-type stars. We
compared the estimated effective temperatures and gravities as a
function of (internally consistent) spectral classifications.
Results: While the general trend is that the temperature of a star
increases with earlier spectral types and decreasing metallicity, we
show that the wide range of gravities found for O-type dwarfs - spaning
up to 0.45-0.50 dex in some spectral bins - plays a critical role on the
dependence of the effective temperature calibrations as a function of
spectral type and metallicity. Conclusions: This result warns us
about the use of SpT - Teff calibrations for O dwarfs that
ignore the effects of gravity, and highlights the risks of employing
calibrations based on small samples. The effects of this scatter in
gravities (evolutionary status) for O-type dwarfs should be included in
future recipes that employ SpT - Teff calibrations.
Based on observations made with (1) the Nordic Optical Telescope,
operated on the island of La Palma jointly by Denmark, Finland, Iceland,
Norway, and Sweden, in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los
Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, and (2)
the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope in programme
182.D-0222.
Proyectos relacionados
Proyecto IACOB: Una Nueva Era en el Estudio de Estrellas OB Galácticas
Massive stars has been many times claimed as Cosmic Engines and Gifts of Nature for the study of the Universe, from the Solar neighbourhood to the large-z Universe. The complete understanding of the physical properties and evolution of massive stars (and their interplay with the ISM) is crucial for many fields of Astrophysics and, ultimately, to
Sergio
Simón Díaz