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20 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/9805352

 Article overview


Massive star populations in I Zw 18: A probe of stellar evolution in the early universe
Daniel Schaerer ; Duilia de Mello ; Claus Leitherer ; Jennifer Heldmann ;
Date 28 May 1998
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationOMP, Toulouse), Duilia de Mello (STScI), Claus Leitherer (STScI), Jennifer Heldmann (Colgate Univ., Hamilton
AbstractWe present a study of the gaseous and stellar emission in I Zw18, the most metal-poor star-forming galaxy known. Archival HST WFPC2 and FOS data have been used to analyze the spatial distribution of [OIII], Halpha, and HeII 4686. The latter is used to identify Wolf-Rayet stars found by ground-based spectroscopy and to locate nebular HeII emission. Most of the HeII emission is associated with the NW stellar cluster, displaced from the surrounding shell-like [OIII] and Halpha emission. We found evidence for HeII sources compatible with 5-9 WNL stars and/or compact nebular HeII emission as well as residual diffuse emission. New evolutionary tracks and synthesis models at the appropriate metallicity predict a mass limit M_WR ~90 Msun for WR stars to become WN and WC/WO. The observed equivalent widths of the WR lines are in good agreement with an instantaneous burst model with a Salpeter IMF extending up to M_up ~ 120-150 Msun. Our model is also able to fully reproduce the observed equivalent widths of nebular HeII emission due to the presence of WC/WO stars. This finding together with the spatial distribution of nebular HeII further supports the hypothesis that WR stars are responsible for nebular HeII emission in extra-galactic HII regions. Finally we discuss the implications on stellar mass loss, chemical yields, final stellar masses, and the ionizing flux of starburst galaxies at very low metallicities.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/9805352
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