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High resolution X-ray spectra of very young massive stars opened a new chapter in the diagnostics and understanding of the properties of stellar wind plasmas. Observations of several very young early type stars in the Orion Trapezium demonstrated that the conventional model of shock heated plasmas in stellar winds is not sufficient to explain the observed X-ray spectra. Detailed X-ray line diagnostics revealed extreme temperatures in some of the candidates as well as evidence for high plasma densities. It is also evident from high resolution spectra of more conventional early type stars, that not all show such extreme characteristics. However, the fact that some of the stars show hot and dense components and some do not requires more understanding of the physical processes involved in stellar wind emissions. The Orion Trapezium stars distinguish themselves from all the others by their extreme youth. By comparing the diverse spectral properties of theta Ori A and theta Ori E with those of theta Ori C, we further demonstrate that X-ray spectral properties of very young massive stars are far from understood.
Strong winds from massive stars are a topic of interest to a wide range of astrophysical fields. In High-Mass X-ray Binaries the presence of an accreting compact object on the one side allows to infer wind parameters from studies of the varying prope
The cluster NGC 3603 hosts some of the most massive stars in the Galaxy. With a modest 50 ks exposure with the Chandra High Energy Grating Spectrometer, we have resolved emission lines in spectra of several of the brightest cluster members which are
The supersonic stellar and disk winds possessed by massive young stellar objects will produce shocks when they collide against the interior of a pre-existing bipolar cavity (resulting from an earlier phase of jet activity). The shock heated gas emits
Although the environments of star and planet formation are thermodynamically cold, substantial X-ray emission from 10-100 MK plasmas is present. In low mass pre-main sequence stars, X-rays are produced by violent magnetic reconnection flares. In high
The X-ray emission from a simulated massive stellar cluster is investigated. The emission is calculated from a 3D hydrodynamical model which incorporates the mechanical feedback from the stellar winds of 3 O-stars embedded in a giant molecular cloud