Context. Massive stars burn hydrogen through the CNO cycle during most of their evolution. When mixing is efficient or when mass transfer in binary systems occurs, chemically processed material is observed at the surface of O and B stars. Aims. ON stars show stronger lines of nitrogen than morphologically normal counterparts. Whether this corresponds to the presence of material processed through the CNO cycle is not known. Our goal is to answer this question. Methods. We performed a spectroscopic analysis of a sample of ON stars with atmosphere models. We determined the fundamental parameters as well as the He, C, N, and O surface abundances. We also measured the projected rotational velocities. We compared the properties of...
International audienceContext. The evolution of massive stars is still partly unconstrained. Mass, m...
International audienceContext. Massive star evolution remains only partly constrained. In particular...
International audienceContext. Some O and B stars show unusually strong or weak lines of carbon and/...
International audienceContext. Massive stars burn hydrogen through the CNO cycle during most of thei...
© ESO, 2017. Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reac...
Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reaching evolution...
Aims. Recent observations have challenged our understanding of rotational mixing in massive stars by...
Aims. The nitrogen-to-carbon (N/C) and nitrogen-to-oxygen (N/O) ratios are the most sensitive quanti...
Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reaching evolution...
Context. Rotational mixing is known to significantly affect the evolution of massive stars; however,...
International audienceContext. The evolution of massive stars is still partly unconstrained. Mass, m...
International audienceContext. Massive star evolution remains only partly constrained. In particular...
International audienceContext. Some O and B stars show unusually strong or weak lines of carbon and/...
International audienceContext. Massive stars burn hydrogen through the CNO cycle during most of thei...
© ESO, 2017. Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reac...
Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reaching evolution...
Aims. Recent observations have challenged our understanding of rotational mixing in massive stars by...
Aims. The nitrogen-to-carbon (N/C) and nitrogen-to-oxygen (N/O) ratios are the most sensitive quanti...
Context. Theoretically, rotation-induced chemical mixing in massive stars has far reaching evolution...
Context. Rotational mixing is known to significantly affect the evolution of massive stars; however,...
International audienceContext. The evolution of massive stars is still partly unconstrained. Mass, m...
International audienceContext. Massive star evolution remains only partly constrained. In particular...
International audienceContext. Some O and B stars show unusually strong or weak lines of carbon and/...