Hubble Space Telescope Planetary Camera Images of R136
Abstract
The Planetary Camera of the Hubble Space Telescope has been used to obtain broad and narrowband images of R136, the core of the massive star cluster 30 Doradus in the Large Magellanic Cloud. R136a, the brightest component of R136, is shown to have at least 12 separate components, including the eight originally identified by speckle interferometry. Three of the 12 components are previously unidentified close companions of the speckle components. The stars within R136a are found to have luminosities and colors of normal evolved (Wolf-Rayet and blue supergiants) and zero-age main-sequence (ZAMS) massive stars. A narrowband He II filter was used to investigate the Wolf-Rayet stellar population. We find that three stars in R136a are of the Wolf-Rayet type; of the two identified from ground-based data, one is now resolved into two components. We present color-magnitude diagrams and a luminosity function of the stars within the larger region (2 pc) defined as R136. We find that the stars in R136 are similar in color and luminosity to those of cluster members that lie outside that crowded inner region. The lower end of the color-magnitude diagram corresponds to ZAMS spectral type B3. No red supergiants have been detected within R136 The luminosity per unit area in the inner 1" (0.25 pc) of R136 is >= 50 times that of the center of Orion for a comparable area and seven times that of the core of NGC 3603. The luminosity per unit area of all of R136 is comparable to that of Orion but is sustained over 130 times the area. An F336W surface brightness profile is constructed for R136 based on the stellar photometry. The distribution is found to be consistent with a pure power law with I(r) is proportional to rgamma with γ = - 1.72+/-0.06 or with a small core with r_c_ < 0.25", considerably smaller than predicted from ground-based observations. In the latter case ρ_0_> 5 x 10^4^M_sun_ pc^-3^ The implied upper limit on the relaxation time for the cluster is much smaller than the age of 3.5 x 10^6^ yrs required by the presence of Wolf-Rayet stars. This suggests that relaxation effects have been very important in determining the observed structure of the cluster unless a large population of lower mass stars is also present.
- Publication:
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The Astronomical Journal
- Pub Date:
- November 1992
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1992AJ....104.1721C
- Keywords:
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- Astronomical Photography;
- Cameras;
- Hubble Space Telescope;
- Massive Stars;
- Star Clusters;
- Narrowband;
- Spaceborne Astronomy;
- Stellar Cores;
- Astrophysics;
- MAGELLANIC CLOUDS;
- HII REGIONS