The deep OB star population in Carina from the VST Photometric Hα Survey (VPHAS+)

Abstract

Massive OB stars are critical to the ecology of galaxies, and yet our knowledge of OB stars in the Milky Way, fainter than V 12, remains patchy. Data from the VST Photometric Hα Survey (VPHAS+) permit the construction of the first deep catalogues of blue excess-selected OB stars, without neglecting the stellar field. A total of 14900 candidates with 2MASS cross-matches are blue-selected from a 42 square-degree region in the Galactic Plane, capturing the Carina Arm over the Galactic longitude range 282 293. Spectral energy distribution fitting is performed on these candidates' combined VPHAS+ u,g,r,i and 2MASS J,H,K magnitudes. This delivers: effective temperature constraints, statistically separating O from early-B stars; high-quality extinction parameters, A0 and RV (random errors typically < 0.1). The high-confidence O-B2 candidates number 5915 and a further 5170 fit to later B spectral type. Spectroscopy of 276 of the former confirms 97% of them. The fraction of emission line stars among all candidate B stars is 7--8% . Greyer (RV > 3.5) extinction laws are ubiquitous in the region, over the distance range 2.5--3 kpc to 10~kpc. Near prominent massive clusters, RV tends to rise, with particularly large and chaotic excursions to RV 5 seen in the Carina Nebula. The data reveal a hitherto unnoticed association of 108 O-B2 stars around the O5If+ star LSS 2063 ( = 289.77, b = -1.22). Treating the OB star scale-height as a constant within the thin disk, we find an orderly mean relation between extinction (A0) and distance in the Galactic longitude range, 287.6 < < 293.5, and infer the subtle onset of thin-disk warping. A halo around NGC 3603, roughly a degree in diameter, of 500 O-B2 stars with 4 < A0 (mag) < 7 is noted.

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