Title: Distances to Galaxies from the Brightest Stars in the Universe Authors: R.-P. Kudritzki (1,2,3), M.A. Urbaneja (1) ((1) Institute for Astronomy, UH, (2) Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics, (3) University Observatory Munich)
Blue Supergiants (BSGs) are the brightest stars in the universe at visual light with absolute magnitudes up to Mv=-10 mag. They are ideal stellar objects for the determination of extragalactic distances, in particular, because the perennial uncertainties troubling most of the other stellar distance indicators, interstellar extinction and metallicity, do not affect them. The quantitative spectral analysis of low resolution spectra of individual BSGs provides accurate stellar parameters and chemical composition, which are then used to determine accurate reddening and extinction from photometry for each individual object. Accurate distances can be determined from stellar gravities and effective temperatures using the "Flux Weighted Gravity - Luminosity Relationship (FGLR)". Most recent results of the quantitative spectral analysis of BSGs in galaxies within and beyond the Local Group based on medium and low resolution spectra obtained with the ESO VLT and the Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea are presented and distances obtained with the FGLR-method are discussed together with the effects of patchy extinction and abundance gradients in galaxies. BSG metallicities and metallicity gradients are compared with results from strong-line HII region studies and the consequences for the empirical calibration of the metallicity dependence of the Cepheid period-luminosity relationship are pointed out. The perspectives of future work are discussed, the use of the giant ground-based telescopes of the next generation such as the TMT on Mauna Kea and the E-ELT and the tremendous value of the GAIA mission to allow for the ultimate calibration of the FGLR using galactic BSGs.
Title: Multiple ring nebulae around blue supergiants Authors: S. M. Chita, N. Langer, A. J. van Marle, G. Garcia-Segura, A. Heger
In the course of the life of a massive star, wind-wind interaction can give rise to the formation of circumstellar nebulae which are both predicted and observed in the nature. We present generic model calculations to predict the properties of such nebulae for blue supergiants. From stellar evolution calculations including rotation, we obtain the time dependence of the stellar wind properties and of the stellar radiation field. These are used as input for hydro-calculations of the circumstellar medium throughout the star's life. Here, we present the results for a rapidly rotating 12 solar masses single star. This star undergoes a blue loop during its post main sequence evolution, at the onset of which its contraction spins it up close to critical rotation. Due to the consequent anisotropic mass loss, the blue supergiant wind sweeps up the preceding slow wind into an hour glass structure. Its collision with the previously formed spherical red supergiant wind shell forms a short-lived luminous nebula consisting of two polar caps and a central inner ring. With time, the polar caps evolve into mid-latitude rings which gradually move toward the equatorial plane while the central ring is fading. These structures are reminiscent to the observed nebulae around the blue supergiant Sher 25 and the progenitor of SN 1987A. The simple model of an hour glass colliding with a spherical shell retrieves most of the intriguing nebula geometries discovered around blue supergiants, and suggests them to form an evolutionary sequence. Our results indicate that binarity is not required to obtain them.