Physical properties and evolution of Massive Stars

    General
    Description

    This project aims at the searching, observation and analysis of massive stars in nearby galaxies to provide a solid empirical ground to understand their physical properties as a function of those key parameters that gobern their evolution (i.e. mass, spin, metallicity, mass loss, and binary interaction).

    Massive stars are central objects to Astrophysics. Born with at least 8 solar masses, their evolution proceeds very fast, yielding large amounts of nuclear processed material by means of strong stellar winds (loosing up to 90% of their initial mass before facing a violent death as Supernova) and emitting intense radiation fields. Despite their scarcity, massive stars play a decisive role in many aspects of the evolution of the Cosmos (e.g. they are primary agents of the chemical and dynamical evolution of galaxies and have been proposed as key agents in the reionization of the Universe). Along their complex evolution, they are associated with the most extreme stellar objects (O-type and WR stars; blue and red supergiants; luminous blue variables; massive stellar black holes, neutron stars and magnetars; massive X- and gamma-ray binaries). They are also the origin of newly studied phenomena such as long-duration GRBs or the recently detected gravitational waves produced by a merger of two massive black holes or neutron stars. From a practical perspective, massive stars have become invaluable indicators of present-day abundances and distances in external galaxies, even beyond the Local Group. In addition, the interpretation of the light emitted by H II regions and starburst galaxies relies on our knowledge of the effect that the strong ionizing radiation emitted by these hot stellar objects produces on the surrounding interstellar medium.

    This project aims at the searching, observation and analysis of massive stars in nearby galaxies to provide a solid empirical ground to understand their physical properties as a function of those key parameters that gobern their evolution (i.e. mass, spin, metallicity, mass loss, and binary interaction). In this endeavour, the project benefits from best quality observations obtained with the last generation of facilities available at the Canary and the ESO observatories, as well as other observations of interest provided from space missions such as Gaia, HST, IUE and TESS. Samples with a few to several hundreds of individual massive stars in different evolutionary stages and metallicity environments are then analyzed with the last generation of stellar atmosphere codes and optimized tools for the quantitative spectroscopic analysis of massive stars to extract as much empirical information as possible about stellar+wind parameters, surface abundances and spectroscopic variability.

    The main research lines presently active in the project are:

    • the observation and analysis of large samples of massive OB stars in the Milky Way;
    • the exploration of the hidden population of massive stars in the Milky Way;
    • the searching, observation and analysis of massive extragalactic stars, with special emphasis in those found in low metallicity galaxies;
    • the development and use of model atmospheres, model atoms and numerical tools for the analysis of massive stars.
    Principal investigator
    Project staff
    Dr.
    Gabriel Gómez Velarde

    Highlights 2020

    1. The IACOB project presents empirical evidence of the scarcity of Galactic O-type stars with masses 40-80 Msol close to the theoretical zero age main sequence. Th reason of this result could be indicating that the accretion rate of mass during the stars formation process of massive stars could be lower than traditionally considered.
    2. Presented empirical evidence of the existence of multiple star forming bursts in the Cygnus OB2 massive star formation region. The way is paved for the first in-depth study of the massive star population of the Cygus-X region in the Milky Way benefiting from the WEAVE survey.
    3. Studied membership and kinematical properties in a sample of 80 blue and red supergiants in the PerOB1 association by using high resolution multi-epoch spectroscopy and Gaia astrometry data. A forthcoming spectroscopic study of this sample of star will provide new empirical clues to improve our understanding of massive stars evolution.
    4. The MAMSIE-IACOB collaboration presents first in-depth study of the pulsational propeties of a large sample of massive Galactic OB-type stars by means of the combined study of high-resolution spectroscopic data from HERMES, FIES and SONG and high cadence photometric data provide by the TESS mission.
    5. Estimated that the binarity fraction for evolved high-mass stars (red supergiants) should be at least 0.15±0.03.
    6. Identified the first strong candidate to be a super-AGB star in the Galaxy (VX Sgr).

    Related publications

    The IACOB project. VIII. Searching for empirical signatures of binarity in fast-rotating O-type stars 2023A&A...672A..22B
    Gaia-ESO survey: Massive stars in the Carina Nebula. I. A new census of OB stars 2023A&A...671A..20B
    The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey. Observational evidence for two distinct populations of massive runaway stars in 30 Doradus 2022A&A...668L...5S
    A census of OBe stars in nearby metal-poor dwarf galaxies reveals a high fraction of extreme rotators 2022A&A...667A.100S
    EMIR, the near-infrared camera and multi-object spectrograph for the GTC. EMIR at GTC 2022A&A...667A.107G
    The Gaia-ESO Public Spectroscopic Survey: Motivation, implementation, GIRAFFE data processing, analysis, and final data products 2022A&A...666A.120G
    The Gaia-ESO Public Spectroscopic Survey: Implementation, data products, open cluster survey, science, and legacy,★ 2022A&A...666A.121R
    An X-ray-quiet black hole born with a negligible kick in a massive binary within the Large Magellanic Cloud 2022NatAs...6.1085S
    The Tarantula Massive Binary Monitoring. VI. Characterisation of hidden companions in 51 single-lined O-type binaries: A flat mass-ratio distribution and black-hole binary candidates 2022A&A...665A.148S
    Constraining the overcontact phase in massive binary evolution. II. Period stability of known O+O overcontact systems 2022A&A...666A..18A
    The IACOB project. VII. The rotational properties of Galactic massive O-type stars revisited 2022A&A...665A.150H
    A new reference catalogue for the very metal-poor Universe: +150 OB stars in Sextans A 2022MNRAS.516.4164L
    The VLT-FLAMES survey of massive stars. NGC 2004#115: A triple system hosting a possible short period B+BH binary 2022A&A...665A.180L
    The Gaia-ESO survey: A spectroscopic study of the young open cluster NGC 3293 2022A&A...665A.108M
    The Internal Proper Motion Kinematics of NGC 346: Past Formation and Future Evolution 2022ApJ...936..135S
    Westerlund 1 under the light of Gaia EDR3: Distance, isolation, extent, and a hidden population 2022A&A...664A.146N
    The EURONEAR Lightcurve Survey of Near Earth Asteroids 2017-2020 2022EM&P..126....6V
    Red supergiant stars in binary systems. I. Identification and characterization in the small magellanic cloud from the UVIT ultraviolet imaging survey 2022MNRAS.513.5847P
    The Gaia-ESO Survey: The analysis of the hot-star spectra 2022A&A...661A.120B
    Stellar mergers as the origin of the blue main-sequence band in young star clusters 2022NatAs...6..480W
    Properties of the Be-type stars in 30 Doradus 2022MNRAS.512.3331D
    Near-IR narrow-band imaging with CIRCE at the Gran Telescopio Canarias: Searching for Lyα-emitters at z ∼ 9.3 2022A&A...659A.116C
    The nature of the Cygnus extreme B supergiant 2MASS J20395358+4222505 2022MNRAS.511.3113H
    Massive stars in extremely metal-poor galaxies: a window into the past 2021ExA....51..887G
    MONOS: Multiplicity Of Northern O-type Spectroscopic systems. II. Orbit review and analysis for 35 single-lined spectroscopic binary systems and candidates 2021A&A...655A...4T
    A massive open cluster hiding in full sight 2021MNRAS.505.1618N
    Hubble spectroscopy of LB-1: Comparison with B+black-hole and Be+stripped-star models 2021A&A...649A.167L
    Convective core sizes in rotating massive stars. I. Constraints from solar metallicity OB field stars 2021A&A...648A.126M
    Assessing the Stellar Population and the Environment of an H II Region on the Far Side of the Galaxy 2021ApJ...911...91C
    Mapping the core of the Tarantula Nebula with VLT-MUSE. II. The spectroscopic Hertzsprung-Russell diagram of OB stars in NGC 2070 2021A&A...648A..65C
    Multiplicity among the cool supergiants in the Magellanic Clouds 2021MNRAS.502.4890D
    A dearth of young and bright massive stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud 2021A&A...646A.106S
    The nature of VX Sagitarii. Is it a TŻO, a RSG, or a high-mass AGB star? 2021A&A...646A..98T
    Lucky spectroscopy, an equivalent technique to lucky imaging. II. Spatially resolved intermediate-resolution blue-violet spectroscopy of 19 close massive binaries using the William Herschel Telescope 2021A&A...646A..11M
    2D kinematics of massive stars near the Galactic Centre 2021MNRAS.500.3213L
    2D kinematics of massive stars near the Galactic Centre 2020MNRAS.500.3213L
    High-resolution spectroscopic study of massive blue and red supergiants in Perseus OB1. I. Definition of the sample, membership, and kinematics 2020A&A...643A.116D
    The R136 star cluster dissected with Hubble Space Telescope/STIS - II. Physical properties of the most massive stars in R136 2020MNRAS.499.1918B
    Spectroscopic characterization of the known O-star population in Cygnus OB2. Evidence of multiple star-forming bursts 2020A&A...642A.168B
    CARMENES input catalogue of M dwarfs. V. Luminosities, colours, and spectral energy distributions 2020A&A...642A.115C

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