A slitless spectroscopic survey for H alpha emission-line objects in SMC clusters
Author(s): Martayan, C.; Baade, D.; Fabregat, J.
Source: ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS Volume: 509 DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200911672 Published: JAN 2010
Context. A fair fraction of all single early-type stars display emission lines well before their supergiant phase. Very rapid rotation is necessary for these stars to form rotationally supported decretion disks. However, it is unknown whether and which other parameters may be important.
Aims. We assess the roles of metallicity and evolutionary age in the appearance of the so-called Be phenomenon.
Methods. Slitless CCD spectra were obtained covering the bulk (about 3 square degrees) of the Small Magellanic Cloud. For H alpha line-emission twice as strong as the ambient continuum, the survey is complete to spectral type B2/B3 on the main sequence. About 8120 spectra of 4437 stars were searched for emission lines in 84 open clusters, and 370 emission-line stars were found, among them at least 231 close to the main sequence. For 176 of them, photometry is available from the OGLE database. For comparison with a higher-metallicity environment, the Galactic sample of the photometric H alpha survey by McSwain & Gies (2005, ApJS, 161, 118) was used.
Results. Among early spectral sub-types, Be stars are more frequent by a factor similar to 3-5 in the SMC than in the Galaxy. The distribution with spectral type is similar in both galaxies, i.e., not strongly dependent on metallicity. The fraction of Be stars does not seem to vary with local star density. The Be phenomenon mainly sets in towards the end of the main-sequence evolution (this trend may be more pronounced in the SMC); but some Be stars already form with Be-star characteristics. In small subsamples (such as single clusters), even if they appear identical, the fraction of emission-line stars can deviate drastically from the mean.
Conclusions. In all probability, the fractional critical angular rotation rate, Omega/Omega(c), is one of the main parameters governing the occurrence of the Be phenomenon. If the Be character is only acquired during the course of evolution, the key circumstance is the evolution of Omega/Omega(c), which is not only dependent on metallicity but differently so for different mass ranges. As a result, even if the Be phenomenon is driven basically by a single parameter (namely Omega/Omega(c)), it can assume a complex multi-parametric appearance. The large cluster-to-cluster differences, which seem stronger than all other variations, serve as a caveat that this big picture may undergo significant second-order modulations (e. g., pulsations, initial angular momentum, etc.).