论文标题
在小麦哲伦云中的年轻而明亮的巨大星星的缺乏
A dearth of young and bright massive stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud
论文作者
论文摘要
低金属性下的大量恒星进化与高红移天体物理学中的许多田间密切相关,但知识较低。小型麦哲伦云(SMC)是一个独特的实验室,可以研究这一点,因为它的金属性为0.2 ZSOL,其接近性以及目前正在形成恒星。我们将光谱型目录与Gaia幅度结合使用来计算明亮的SMC星的温度和亮度。通过将这些与文献研究进行比较,我们测试了方法的有效性,并使用Gaia数据,我们估计了目录中恒星的完整性,这是亮度的函数。这使我们能够获得SMC中最发光的恒星几乎完整的视图。与恒星进化预测相比。我们还计算了灭绝分布,电离光子产量和恒星形成速率。我们的结果表明,SMS仅容纳30个非常发光的主序列恒星(M> 40 msol; L> 10^5 lsol),远小于亮度范围3*10^4 <l/lsol <3*10^5的恒星数量,并且SMC中通常引用的恒星形成率。更令人震惊的是,我们发现,对于M> 20 MSOL的质量,几乎没有氢燃烧阶段的前半部分。这反映了以银河系和大麦芽云而闻名的质性相似的特殊性。这相当于缺乏燃烧氦气的恒星的氢,这对于较高的亮度更为明显。我们认为,恒星形成率下降或陡峭的初始质量功能不可能是对年轻明亮恒星缺乏的唯一解释。取而代之的是,这些恒星中的许多可能被嵌入其出生云中,尽管观察性证据很薄弱。我们讨论对宇宙电源的影响和初始质量函数的首端。
Massive star evolution at low metallicity is closely connected to many fields in high-redshift astrophysics, but poorly understood. The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) is a unique laboratory to study this because of its metallicity of 0.2 Zsol, its proximity, and because it is currently forming stars. We used a spectral type catalog in combination with GAIA magnitudes to calculate temperatures and luminosities of bright SMC stars. By comparing these with literature studies, we tested the validity of our method, and using GAIA data, we estimated the completeness of stars in the catalog as a function of luminosity. This allowed us to obtain a nearly complete view of the most luminous stars in the SMC. When then compared with stellar evolution predictions. We also calculated the extinction distribution, the ionizing photon production rate, and the star formation rate. Our results imply that the SMS hosts only 30 very luminous main-sequence stars (M > 40 Msol; L > 10^5 Lsol), which are far fewer than expected from the number of stars in the luminosity range 3*10^4 < L/Lsol < 3*10^5 and from the typically quoted star formation rate in the SMC. Even more striking, we find that for masses above M > 20 Msol, stars in the first half of their hydrogen-burning phase are almost absent. This mirrors a qualitatively similar peculiarity that is known for the Milky Way and Large Magellanic Cloud. This amounts to a lack of hydrogen-burning counterparts of helium-burning stars, which is more pronounced for higher luminosities. We argue that a declining star formation rate or a steep initial mass function are unlikely to be the sole explanations for the dearth of young bright stars. Instead, many of these stars might be embedded in their birth clouds, although observational evidence for this is weak. We discuss implications for cosmic reionization and the top end of the initial mass function.