Bibcode
García Vargas, M. L.; Pérez, E.; González-Delgado, R. M.; Terlevich, R.; Díaz, A. I.; Terlevich, E.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. Vol. 279, No. 4, p. 1219 - 1234
Advertised on:
4
1996
Citations
46
Refereed citations
38
Description
The authors present high signal-to-noise ratio spectrophotometry
obtained in the optical and near-infrared with the double spectrograph
ISIS on the WHT, of the M33 giant H II region NGC 604. The authors' main
aim was to deduce global properties of a nearby giant H II region. The
near-infrared spectral range, central to the authors' study, comprises
the gravity-sensitive Ca II triplet (CaT) stellar absorption features.
The data were obtained using two different techniques: (1) scanning with
a 1.75-arcmin long slit that provided integrated spectra of the central
part of the nebula, and (2) long-slit spectra of the brightest continuum
knots. A single red supergiant (RSG) star was detected, judging from the
measured strength of the stellar CaT absorption lines, visible in one
region and only after carefully subtracting the hydrogen Paschen
emission lines that dominate the near-infrared spectra. The feature is
not observed in the integrated spectrum. The observed Paschen
discontinuity in emission allows the authors to determine an electron
temperature, which is similar to the one obtained from the ratio of
forbidden line ([O III]) intensities, suggesting that temperature
fluctuations are not present in the nebula. Wolf-Rayet (WR) features
have been found in several positions; the observed He II
λ4686-Å line intensity is found to be larger than in
galactic WR stars, by a factor of ≡2. Exceptionally broad
components of permitted lines of hydrogen and helium (FWHM ≡2500
km s-1) are observed in one of the brightest stars in NGC
604. This object shows a large overabundance of He and strong spectral
variability on time-scales of ≡10 yr. The authors classify it as
an LBV-WR transition object. They identify the core of the cluster
ionizing the nebula, which is probably younger than 5 Myr. Implications
of these results for the evolutionary state of NGC 604 are discussed.
Also discussed are the difficulties involved in the techniques for using
RSGs as tracers of starburst activity in galactic nuclei.