Line Luminosities of Galactic and Magellanic Cloud Wolf-Rayet stars
Abstract
We provide line luminosities and spectroscopic templates of prominent optical emission lines of 133 Galactic Wolf-Rayet stars by exploiting Gaia DR3 parallaxes and optical spectrophotometry, and provide comparisons with 112 counterparts in the Magellanic Clouds. Average line luminosities of the broad blue (He II 4686, C III 4647,51, N III 4634,41, N V 4603,20) and yellow (C IV 5801,12) emission features for WN, WN/C, WC and WO stars have application in characterising the Wolf-Rayet populations of star-forming regions of distant, unresolved galaxies. Early-type WN stars reveal lower line luminosities in more metal poor environments, but the situation is less clear for late-type WN stars. LMC WC4-5 line luminosities are higher than their Milky Way counterparts, with line luminosities of Magellanic Cloud WO stars higher than Galactic stars. We highlight other prominent optical emission lines, N IV 3478,85 for WN and WN/C stars, O IV 3403,13 for WC and WO stars and O VI 3811,34 for WO stars. We apply our calibrations to representative metal-poor and metal-rich WR galaxies, IC 4870 and NGC 3049, respectively, with spectral templates also applied based on a realistic mix of subtypes. Finally, the global blue and C IV 5801,12 line luminosities of the Large (Small) Magellanic Clouds are 2.6e38 erg/s (9e36 erg/s) and 8.8e37 erg/s (4e36 erg/s), respectively, with the cumulative WR line luminosity of the Milky Way estimated to be an order of magnitude higher than the LMC.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.