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 VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey. II. R139 revealed as a massive binary system 2011A&A...530L..10T
    The VLT-FLAMES Survey of Massive Stars 2008Msngr.131...25E
    The nature of HH 223 from long-slit spectroscopy 2009A&A...498..761L
    The Counterjet of HH 30: New Light on Its Binary Driving Source 2012AJ....144...61E
    Spectroscopic and physical parameters of Galactic O-type stars. I. Effects of rotation and spectral resolving power in the spectral classification of dwarfs and giants 2011A&A...530A..11M
    HST/STIS spectroscopy of the magnetic Of?p star HD 108: the low state at ultraviolet wavelengths 2012MNRAS.422.2314M
    Discovery of a young and massive stellar cluster. Spectrophotometric near-infrared study of Masgomas-1 2012A&A...541A..75R
    Blue Luminous Stars in Nearby Galaxies—UIT 005: A Possible Link to the Luminous Blue Variable Stage 2011ApJ...735...39U
    Wind Diagnostic from Infrared Lines 2008ASPC..388..195L
    Observational Evidence for a Correlation Between Macroturbulent Broadening and Line-profile Variations in OB Supergiants 2010ApJ...720L.174S
    Is macroturbulent broadening in OB Supergiants related to pulsations? 2010AN....331.1069S
    Field O stars: formed in situ or as runaways? 2012MNRAS.424.3037G
    Fluorescent Excitation of Balmer Lines in Gaseous Nebulae: Case D 2009ApJ...691.1712L
    WSO and the winds of massive stars: the gate to the metal-poor Local Universe 2011Ap&SS.335...91G
    The young stellar population of IC 1613. II. Physical properties of OB associations 2010A&A...523A..23G
    The young stellar population of IC 1613. I. A new catalogue of OB associations 2009A&A...502.1015G
    The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey. I. Introduction and observational overview 2011A&A...530A.108E
    The nature of V39: an LBV candidate or LBV impostor in the very low metallicity galaxy IC 1613? 2010A&A...513A..70H
    The Araucaria Project: VLT-spectroscopy of blue massive stars in NGC 55 2008A&A...485...41C
    The ARAUCARIA project: Grid-based quantitative spectroscopic study of massive blue stars in NGC 55 2012A&A...542A..79C
    Pursuing Local Group blue massive stars with WSO-ISSIS 2011Ap&SS.335..131G
    On the nature of candidate luminous blue variables in M 33 2012A&A...541A.146C
    A peculiar Of star in the Local Group galaxy IC 1613 2012A&A...543A..85H
    The complex structure of HH 110 as revealed from Integral Field Spectroscopy 2010MNRAS.406.2193L
    Integral field spectroscopy of the brightest knots of HH 223 in L723 2012MNRAS.424.1817L
    A detailed study of the H ii region M 43 and its ionizing star 2011A&A...530A..57S
    An improved version of the implicit integral method to solving radiative transfer problems 2012Ap.....55..110S
    Near-infrared study of the stellar population of Sh2-152 2011A&A...535A...8R
    Near-infrared spectroscopy in NGC 7538 2010A&A...517A...2P
    HH 223: a parsec-scale H2 outflow in the star-forming region L723 2010A&A...523A..16L

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