Space astrometry of the very massive ˜150 M⊙ candidate runaway star VFTS682

Authors
  • R.P. van der Marel
  • E. Laplace ORCID logo
  • J.M. Bestenlehner
  • C.J. Evans
  • V. Hénault-Brunet
  • S. Justham ORCID logo
  • A. de Koter
  • N. Langer
  • F. Najarro
  • F.R.N. Schneider
  • J.S. Vink
Publication date 01-01-2019
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Letters
Volume | Issue number 482 | 1
Pages (from-to) L102-106
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
How very massive stars form is still an open question in astrophysics. VFTS682 is among the most massive stars known, with an inferred initial mass of ≳150M⊙⁠. It is located in 30 Doradus at a projected distance of 29 pc from the central cluster R136. Its apparent isolation led to two hypotheses: either it formed in relative isolation or it was ejected dynamically from the cluster. We investigate the kinematics of VFTS682 as obtained by Gaia and Hubble Space Telescope astrometry. We derive a projected velocity relative to the cluster of 38±17km s−1 (1σ confidence interval). Although the error bars are substantial, two independent measures suggest that VFTS682 is a runaway ejected from the central cluster. This hypothesis is further supported by a variety of circumstantial clues. The central cluster is known to harbour other stars more massive than 150M⊙ of similar spectral type and recent astrometric studies on VFTS16 and VFTS72 provide direct evidence that the cluster can eject some of its most massive members, in agreement with theoretical predictions. If future data confirm the runaway nature, this would make VFTS682 the most massive runaway star known to date.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/mnrasl/sly194
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018MNRAS.tmpL.205R
Permalink to this page
Back