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A&A 375, 161-195 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010805
Radiation-driven winds of hot luminous stars
XIII. A description of NLTE line blocking and blanketing towards realistic models for expanding atmospheres
A. W. A. Pauldrach, T. L. Hoffmann and M. LennonInstitut für Astronomie und Astrophysik der Universität München, Scheinerstraße 1, 81679 München, Germany
(Received 13 October 2000 / Accepted 30 May 2001 )
Erratum Abstract
Spectral analysis of hot luminous stars requires adequate model
atmospheres which take into account the effects of NLTE and radiation
driven winds properly. Here we present significant improvements of
our approach in constructing detailed atmospheric models and synthetic
spectra for hot luminous stars. Moreover, as we regard our solution
method in its present stage already as a standard procedure, we make
our program package WM-basic available to the community
(download is possible from the URL given below).
The most important model improvements towards a realistic description
of stationary wind models concern:
(i) A sophisticated and consistent description of line blocking and
blanketing. Our solution concept to this problem renders the
line blocking influence on the ionizing fluxes
emerging from the
atmospheres of hot stars -mainly the spectral ranges of the EUV and
the UV are affected -in identical quality as the synthetic
high resolution spectra
representing the observable region. In
addition, the line blanketing effect is properly accounted for
in the energy balance.
(ii) The atomic data archive which has been improved and enhanced
considerably, providing the basis for a detailed multilevel NLTE
treatment of the metal ions (from C to Zn) and an adequate
representation of line blocking and the radiative line acceleration.
(iii) A revised inclusion of EUV and X-ray radiation produced by cooling
zones which originate from the simulation of shock heated matter.
This new tool not only provides an easy-to-use method for O-star
diagnostics, whereby physical constraints on the properties of stellar
winds, stellar parameters, and abundances can be obtained via a
comparison of observed and synthetic spectra, but also allows the
astrophysically important information about the ionizing fluxes of hot
stars to be determined automatically. Results illustrating this are
discussed by means of a basic model grid calculated for O-stars with
solar metallicity. To further demonstrate the astrophysical potential
of our new method, we first provide a detailed spectral diagnostic
determination of the stellar parameters, the wind parameters, and the
abundances by an exemplary application to one of our grid-stars, the
O9.5Ia O-supergiant
Cam. Our abundance determinations of the
light elements indicate that these deviate considerably from the solar
values.
Key words: line: formation -- stars: atmospheres -- stars: early type -- stars: mass-loss -- stars: individual:
Offprint request: A. W. A. Pauldrach, http://www.usm.uni-muenchen.de/people/adi/adi.html SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2001
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