4.7 Article

The Physical Parameters of Four WC-type Wolf-Rayet Stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud: Evidence of Evolution*

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 924, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac3426

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA/ADAP grant [80NSSC18K0729]
  2. National Science Foundation [AST-1612874]
  3. STScI [HST-GO-13781]
  4. Slipher Society award
  5. Lowell Pre-doctoral Fellowship by the BF Foundation

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In this study, we conducted a spectral analysis of WC-type Wolf-Rayet stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud to address two important evolutionary questions: whether WO-type WR stars are more oxygen enriched than WC-type stars and whether WR stars evolve independently or require a close companion. The results suggest that these four WC4 stars could have formed through either binary or single-star evolution.
We present a spectral analysis of four Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) WC-type Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars (BAT99-8, BAT99-9, BAT99-11, and BAT99-52) to shed light on two evolutionary questions surrounding massive stars. The first is: are WO-type WR stars more oxygen enriched than WC-type stars, indicating further chemical evolution, or are the strong high-excitation oxygen lines in WO-type stars an indication of higher temperatures. This study will act as a baseline for answering the question of where WO-type stars fall in WR evolution. Each star's spectrum, extending from 1100 to 25000 angstrom, was modeled using cmfgen to determine the star's physical properties such as luminosity, mass-loss rate, and chemical abundances. The oxygen abundance is a key evolutionary diagnostic, and with higher resolution data and an improved stellar atmosphere code, we found the oxygen abundance to be up to a factor of 5 lower than that of previous studies. The second evolutionary question revolves around the formation of WR stars: do they evolve by themselves or is a close companion star necessary for their formation? Using our derived physical parameters, we compared our results to the Geneva single-star evolutionary models and the Binary Population and Spectral Synthesis (BPASS) binary evolutionary models. We found that both the Geneva solar-metallicity models and BPASS LMC-metallicity models are in agreement with the four WC-type stars, while the Geneva LMC-metallicity models are not. Therefore, these four WC4 stars could have been formed either via binary or single-star evolution.

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