Wolf-Rayet stars and radioisotope production
Wolf-Rayet Stars and the Isotopic Anomaly Connection
Wolf-Rayet Stars as IMF Probes
Wolf-Rayet stars as tracing the AGN-starburst connection
Wolf-Rayet stars detected in five associations of NGC 300.
Wolf-Rayet stars in 'lazy' galaxies - A statistical approach
Wolf-Rayet stars in clusters - The initial stellar masses and evolutionary connections between subtypes
Wolf-Rayet stars in extragalactic H II regions - Discovery of a peculiar WR in IC 1613/no. 3
Wolf-Rayet stars in extragalactic H II regions. II - NGC604 - A giant H II region dominated by many Wolf-Rayet stars
Wolf-Rayet Stars in M33 II: Optical Spectroscopy of emission-line stars in Giant Hii Regions
Wolf-Rayet Stars in M33.
Wolf-Rayet stars in open clusters and associations
Wolf-Rayet Stars in Starburst Galaxies
Wolf-Rayet stars in the galactic window around l = 307 .
Wolf-Rayet stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Wolf-Rayet stars in the LMC - How faint are the faintest
Wolf-Rayet stars in the Magellanic Clouds. III - The WO4+O4 V binary SK 188 in the SMC
Wolf-Rayet stars in the Magellanic Clouds. IV - The extraordinarily broad-lined, triple system R130 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Wolf-Rayet stars in the Magellanic Clouds. VI - Spectroscopic orbits of WC binaries and implications for W-R evolution
Wolf-Rayet stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud