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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 February 2017
The objective prism surveys carried out by Sanduleak (1968, 1969) make available for the first time a relatively complete and homogeneous list of the brightest stars in both Magellanic Clouds for the range of spectral types O–G5. Photometric observations in the four color, Hβ system of the 169 candidates in the SMC and the 45 brightest stars in the LMC as well as spectroscopic observations of the most luminous early-type stars, lead to the following picture of the stability and evolution of very massive stars:
(1) The reddening is the same for the most luminous stars in both Clouds and there is a sharply defined upper limit to the stellar luminosity, which is also the same in both Clouds. This limit corresponds to Mbol = −11 ± 1 or 90 in good agreement with the classic study of Feast et al. (1960).
(2) The stars of highest total luminosity are the blue supergiants, and in both Clouds the high temperature limit corresponds to type B1.5 or Te ~ 25000 K for Mv ~ −8. The SMC appears to be deficient in luminous F5–G5 supergiants.
(3) With few exceptions the most luminous stars are not known to show more than low amplitude variations in light. They do show Hβ emission as expected, and four stars in the LMC have anomalously strong emission, indicative of unusual atmospheric activity. Bright Wolf-Rayet stars have long been known in the Clouds; in addition, several candidate Of stars are indicated by the photometry.
(4) The brightest B-type supergiants in the SMC appear to be deficient in N, Si, O, and probably Mg and C, although helium is normal, a result worth pursuing in the less luminous stars.
(5) Judging from the numbers of the brightest stars, the recent rate of star formation in both galaxies per unit mass is quite similar despite the fact that the SMC has a larger fraction of neutral hydrogen and the LMC a more conspicuous display of Hii regions.