Massive obscured clusters in the milky way.
Author
Rubke Zúñiga, Klaus SimónDate
2017Abstract
This thesis comprises of a full search in our galaxy for the hidden population of massive stars
using the near-infrared photometry with a novel method and a quantitative spectroscopy study
of an O star sample in the optical and near-infrared.
Massive clusters are those with mass greater than 10^4 Solar Masses . The number of known massive
clusters is significantly lower than the real prediction, as in general, due to the gas and dust that
surround those clusters make diffcult to find them in the optical range and due to it is necessary
to use near infrared to find and observe them.
Under the MASGOMAS (MAssive Stars in Galactic Obscured MAssive clusterS) project,
the main objective of this thesis is to find massive stars using 2MASS photometry on the north
disc of the galaxy, using LIRIS@WHT (William Hershel Telescope) as the main telescope to
make the follow-up.
The method that we used to find the candidates for the massive stars was to develop an automatic
detection algorithm, which mainly using photometric cuts (K , (J-K) and QIR), which eliminate
a large part of the late not-massive population, and an overdensity algorithm over the stars
which fulfill the photometric cuts. From this study is presented the association MASGOMAS-
6, that result in two populations at two di erent distances. To find high probability massive
cluster candidates, we have developed a study that critically improves the way to select the overdensities.
As result of this improvement we present the association MASGOMAS-10. In both
associations the massive star population is confirmed, supporting the automatic method.
The second part focused on the quantitative spectroscopy study of 12 O-type stars with high
resolution optical spectra (R ~ 46000), which are also present in a survey of high resolution in
the near-infrared (R ~ 12000). To estimate stellar parameters we use the IACOB Grid-Based
Automatic Tool (IACOB-GBAT), an accurate and fast method that compares, by means of a chi^2
algorithm, observed and synthetic H and He line profiles in an automated way. Deriving the
optical stellar parameters we test the viability of deriving parameters using only near-infrared.
This study also lead us to study the not well know clumping condition for our sample, creating
two full grids of clumping models
Finally the clumping study results in a drastic improvement for several wind lines, especially
for supergiant stars.