Statistics
Scientific paper
Nov 1994
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1994aj....108.1674w&link_type=abstract
The Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256), vol. 108, no. 5, p. 1674-1695
Statistics
14
B Stars, Blue Stars, H Alpha Line, H Ii Regions, Magellanic Clouds, Massive Stars, O Stars, Star Distribution, Star Formation, Stellar Composition, Stellar Spectra, Astronomical Photometry, Astronomical Spectroscopy, Color-Magnitude Diagram, Ionization, Ionizing Radiation, Spectroscopic Telescopes, Stellar Color, Stellar Radiation
Scientific paper
In this second in a series of papers on the nature of classical H II regions in the Magellanic Clouds I investigate the properties of the underlying stellar content of the nebulae. Particular emphasis is placed on identifying and classifying the ionizing source(s) for each H II region. With the exception of the LMC H II regions DEM 20 and DEM 8c, I find that all of the objects in this sample are ionized by more than one O or B star. Even the faintest H II regions reflect the formation of a handful of massive, albeit early B type, stars. Typically, one star accounts for 60% - 70% of the ionizing photons and 2 - 5 less massive stars provide the remaining 30% - 40%. From the statistics of the hottest stars in these H II regions, and from considering all the blue stars contained within each region, the distribution of massive stars with spectral type is consistent with results found in similar galactic H II regions.
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