![]() | Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 1994. 32:
227-275 Copyright © 1994 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved |
Massive stars are, for the most part, located in stellar associations born in giant molecular clouds; a powerful enough birth event would be called a "starburst." Initially these stars are surrounded by the dense molecular gas cloud and surrounded by the commonly associated dust. These ensembles will radiate strongly in the IR and radio regions due to the heating of dust and gas excitation, but might be completely hidden optically (e.g. W51 in our Galaxy). After some time, the molecular clouds are dissociated and the dust is dissipated by the radiation and stellar winds from the O stars within, and the region becomes visible as an optical H II or giant H II (GH II) region (e.g. 30 Doradus). The appearance of the spiral arms of galaxies in the visible is primarily determined by the distributions of the H II and GH II regions within them. For the nearer galaxies, the individual stars may be investigated, but for more distant ones, only the integrated properties of the association as it affects the excited gas (and dust) can be studied.
Actual counts of massive stars in associations can be used directly to give estimates of the slope of the IMF, along with the related upper and lower mass limits Mupper and Mlower. We consider these parameters for a group of associations in our Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds in Section 2.2. Tn more distant GH II regions and starburst galaxies (Section 5), we turn to indirect methods used to confront the questions of "How many?" and "What kinds of massive stars are present?". In such distant galaxies, we make use of the integrated spectra and of global properties, such as their far-infrared (FIR) luminosities, and their optical and UV imaging. For indirect methods, we examine the use of 30 Doradus as a fundamental calibrator.
Pioneering efforts to elucidate the numbers and types of massive stars in various environments have been made primarily by Massey and associates, using both photometry and spectroscopy. As Massey (1985) has shown, even the unreddened U BV colors for the hottest stars are degenerate, i.e. one cannot distinguish between the hottest and coolest O type stars on the basis of their photometry alone, as is commonly done with luminosity functions, Massey and his associates' homogeneous approach to the determination of the IMF for various associations of the Galaxy and Magellanic Clouds assures us that their comparisons among various stellar groupings ought to be consistent with each other.
2.2.1 PROCEDURE One first acquires deep CCD U BV frames of the relevant stellar associations. Accurate photometry (to 0.02 mag) must be accomplished, and color-color plots used to estimate the extinction and identify the bluest stars. The U BV colors are used to determine the brightness of the stars but spectra suitable for classification are needed to determine the effective temperature, Teff, of all stars earlier in type than BlV or so. Obtaining spectra is a time-consuming effort requiring large telescopes; the photometry can be done on modest ones.
Distances of the associations by classic spectroscopic parallax
methods are obtained for the Galactic clusters; for the Magellanic
Clouds, the standard distances are used. MV and
spectral type (or
unreddened color) are converted to Mbol and
Teff using a calibration
procedure. These "observed" parameters for the association stars are
plotted on a "theoretical" HR diagram with evolutionary
tracks. Finally, one counts the numbers of stars in each mass interval
along the track, and plots the values as a function of mass. The slope
of this relationship is referred to as
, defined in the equation
![]() | (1) |
where f(M) is the fractional number of stars per unit mass interval M,
A is a scaling constant, and the Salpeter value for
is -1.35. By the
above procedure, one is essentially measuring the slope of the Present
Day Mass Function (PDMF). An important assumption is that this number
is identical to the slope of the IMF; in other words, stellar deaths
can be ignored. This is reasonable for the very youngest O
associations, and one can, if necessary, account for the already
highly evolved W-R stars that are present in some of the regions
studied. A further typical assumption is that the spread in formation
time is of the order of, or less than, the evolution time, which seems
reasonable for O associations (but see
Section 2.2.2). Finally, one
ignores the binary membership. Unless the binary fraction, typically
considered to be 40% for hot stars
(Garmany et al 1980),
is different
from place to place, this assumption is also not unreasonable in the
context of seeking similarities and differences in the numbers and
types of massive stars in various environments.
2.2.2 MASSIVE STAR CENSUS IN O-ASSOCATIONS In Table 1 (adapted from Conti 1994), we summarize the statistics for ten associations in the Galaxy and Magellanic Clouds, along with those for the solar vicinity. They have been grouped by galaxy abundance, thus sampling the composition of the environment out of which these stars formed.
Association | -![]() | # > 60 M![]() | Galaxy | References |
Field < R![]() | 1.3 | Milky Way | Garmany et al 1982 | |
Field > R![]() | 2.1 | Garmany et al 1982 | ||
Cyg OB2 | 1.0 | 7 | Massey & Thompson 1991 | |
Car OB1 | 1.3 | 7 | Massey & Johnson 1993 | |
Ser OB1 | 1.1 | 1 | Hillenbrand et al 1993 | |
LH9 | 1.6 | 0 | LMC | Parker et al 1992 |
LH10 | 1.1 | 4 | Parker et al 1992 | |
LH58 | 1.7 | 0 | Garmany et al 1993 | |
LH117 | 1.8 | 2 | Massey et al 1989a | |
LH118 | 1.8 | 0 | Massey et al 1989a | |
30 Dor | 1.4 | 21 | Parker 1992 | |
NGC 346 | 1.8 | 3 | SMC | Massey et al 1989b |
The two entries for the solar vicinity were obtained by a method
similar to the others but the models used were older and the numbers
not quite comparable; the values are just noted for completeness. The
authors of the various papers cited suggest that
has been determined
to an accuracy of ± 0.2 in each association. If there is a dependence
on metal abundance, Z, which, given the uncertainties, is by no means
clear, then
gets
shallower as the metal abundance increases. This is
in opposition to the prevailing view
(Shields & Tinsley
1976)
that
becomes steeper with increasing abundance.
The entries in Table 1 also give a quantitative
indication of Mupper
for the most massive objects by listing the actual numbers of stars
with masses larger than 60
M as
inferred from the Mbol and Teff. We
obtained this by inspection of the HR diagrams plotted in the various
papers cited. The values, which are more or less proportional to the
total numbers of stars in each region, range farther upward in mass to
somewhere between 80 to 100
M
this is a
reasonable estimate of Mupper
for starburst modeling purposes (see also
Section 3.4). There is no
dependence of either the numbers of massive stars or the
Mupper on the
galaxy environment, or on metallicity Z.
It has been suggested from indirect arguments that the
Mlower, limit
in some starburst regions might be significantly larger than the
canonical 0.1 M
found near the Sun, and more like a few
M
(e.g. M82 -
Rieke 1991,
McLeod et al 1993).
Is there any direct evidence for
this? Among well-studied energetic GH II regions, 30 Dor would be the
place to look. However,
Parker's (1992)
survey was complete only to
an apparent magnitude corresponding to a few
M
, i.e. just
where it
begins to get interesting. Despite the (crowding) difficulties, a
deeper CCD photometric survey of 30 for needs to be made to
investigate its Mlower limit and this issue in general.
In their study of NGC 6611 = Ser OB1,
Hillenbrand et al
(1993)
have
gone sufficiently deep in their CCD survey to be able to say something
about the stellar population at 3-7
M.
Remarkably, they find that
these stars are above the main sequence, in the pre-main sequence
phase. Furthermore, the ages of these still contracting stars are a
few × 105 years, appreciably less than the turn-off time
of the upper
main sequence, which is a few × 106 years! Thus in this
association,
the presence of (at least) 13 O stars has not inhibited further star
formation of lower mass stars. Whether ten or one hundred times that
many O stars would inhibit subsequent lower mass star formation
remains problematic.
Hillenbrand et al (1993) also call attention to several luminous stars that sit well to the right of the main body of massive stars in NGC 6611. They argue that these stars are indeed cluster members, which must have formed before most of the rest. Eye examination of the rest of the associations referenced above also invariably reveals a few stars in similar, advanced, evolutionary stages. Hillenbrand et al suggest star formation might proceed much like "popcorn" when it is heated; a few kernels "pop" before the main body, and a few more lag behind.
2.2.3 LUMINOSITY FUNCTIONS
Massey (1985)
noted that using only photometry, it is difficult to
distinguish among the most massive stars employing luminosity
functions alone. In particular.
Massey et al (1989b)
show that had
they taken only their U BV photometry for the analysis of NGC 346,
they would have found to be
-2.5, instead of the -1.8 value listed
in Table 1.
Hill et al (1994)
have derived
for 14 OB associations in
the Magellanic Clouds using CCD photometry. They too find no
difference in this parameter between the LMC and SMC, thus no
dependence on Z. While their mean values of
are somewhat larger than
those listed in Table 1 (and probably for the
reason mentioned above),
this distinction is probably not significant. Their uncertainties in
are also larger than those found by Massey and associates with their
techniques.
Massey et al (1986)
have done CCD photometry of several associations
in M31. Using plots and evolution tracks similar to
those discussed
above, they obtained the curious result (shown in their Figures 31 and
32) that there are no stars in the luminous associations OB78 and OB48
more massive than 40
M, although
both have W-R stars present. This
inference is probably faulty as it is based on photometry only. Thus
the use of luminosity functions for massive stars must be treated with
caution, as both the derived
and the
Mupper might be suspect. For
luminous stars of M31 and other Local Group galaxies, spectra are
difficult but not impossible to obtain on the largest telescopes,
especially - with multiple slit instrumentation.