Bibcode
Kudritzki, R. P.; Puls, J.; Lennon, D. J.; Venn, K. A.; Reetz, J.; Najarro, F.; McCarthy, J. K.; Herrero, A.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.350, p.970-984 (1999)
Advertised on:
10
1999
Journal
Citations
194
Refereed citations
157
Description
The Balmer lines of four A Ia-supergiants (spectral type A0 to A3) and
fourteen B Ia and Ib-supergiants (spectral type B0 to B3) in the solar
neighbourhood are analyzed by means of NLTE unified model atmospheres to
determine the properties of their stellar winds, in particular their
wind momenta. As in previous work for O-stars (Puls et al. cite{pul96})
a tight relationship between stellar wind momentum and luminosity
(``WLR'') is found. However, the WLR varies as function of spectral
type. Wind momenta are strongest for O-supergiants, then decrease from
early B (B0 and B1) to mid B (B1.5 to B3) spectral types and become
stronger again for A-supergiants. The slope of the WLR appears to be
steeper for A- and mid B-supergiants than for O-supergiants. The
spectral type dependence is interpreted as an effect of ionization
changing the effective number and the line strength distribution
function of spectral lines absorbing photon momentum around the stellar
flux maximum. This interpretation needs to be confirmed by theoretical
calculations for radiation driven winds. The ``Pistol-Star'' in the
Galactic Centre, an extreme mid B-hypergiant recently identified as one
of the most luminous stars (Figer et al. cite{fig99}) is found to
coincide with the extrapolation of the mid B-supergiant WLR towards
higher luminosities. However, the wind momentum of the Luminous Blue
Variable P Cygni, a mid B-supergiant with extremely strong mass-loss, is
1.2 dex higher than the WLR of the ``normal'' supergiants. This
significant difference is explained in terms of the well-known stellar
wind bi-stability of supergiants very close to the Eddinton-limit in
this particular range of effective temperatures. A-supergiants in M31
observed with HIRES at the Keck telescope have wind momenta compatible
with their galactic counterparts. The potential of the WLR as a new,
independent extragalactic distance indicator is discussed. It is
concluded that with ten to twenty objects, photometry with HST and
medium resolution spectroscopy with 8m-telescopes from the ground
distance moduli can be obtained with an accuracy of about 0fm1 out to
the Virgo and Fornax clusters of galaxies.