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X-Shooting ULLYSES: Massive stars at low metallicity. III. Terminal wind speeds of ULLYSES massive stars

Authors :
Hawcroft, C.
Sana, H.
Mahy, L.
Sundqvist, J. O.
de Koter, A.
Crowther, P. A.
Bestenlehner, J. M.
Brands, S. A.
David-Uraz, A.
Decin, L.
Erba, C.
Garcia, M.
Hamann, W. -R.
Herrero, A.
Ignace, R.
Kee, N. D.
Kubátová, B.
Lefever, R.
Moffat, A.
Najarro, F.
Oskinova, L.
Pauli, D.
Prinja, R.
Puls, J.
Sander, A. A. C.
Shenar, T.
St-Louis, N.
ud-Doula, A.
Vink, J. S.
Source :
A&A 688, A105 (2024)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The winds of massive stars have an impact on stellar evolution and on the surrounding medium. The maximum speed reached by these outflows, the terminal wind speed, is a global wind parameter and an essential input for models of stellar atmospheres and feedback. With the arrival of the ULLYSES programme, a legacy UV spectroscopic survey with HST, we have the opportunity to quantify the wind speeds of massive stars at sub-solar metallicity (in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, 0.5Z and 0.2Z) at an unprecedented scale. We empirically quantify the wind speeds of a large sample of OB stars, including supergiants, giants, and dwarfs at sub-solar metallicity. Using these measurements, we investigate trends of terminal wind speed with a number of fundamental stellar parameters, namely effective temperature, metallicity, and surface escape velocity. We empirically determined the terminal wind speed for a sample of 149 OB stars in the Magellanic Clouds either by directly measuring the maximum velocity shift of the absorption component of the Civ 1548-1550 line profile, or by fitting synthetic spectra produced using the Sobolev with exact integration method. Stellar parameters were either collected from the literature, obtained using spectral-type calibrations, or predicted from evolutionary models. We find strong trends of terminal wind speed with effective temperature and surface escape speed when the wind is strong enough to cause a saturated P Cygni profile in Civ 1548-1550. We find evidence for a metallicity dependence on the terminal wind speed proportional to Z^0.22+-0.03 when we compared our results to previous Galactic studies. Our results suggest that effective temperature rather than surface escape speed should be used as a straightforward empirical prediction of terminal wind speed and that the observed metallicity dependence is steeper than suggested by earlier works.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, 8 tables. Accepted in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 688, A105 (2024)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2303.12165
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202245588