Abstract
We present optical spectroscopy of a sample of metal-rich extragalactic HII regions in the spiral galaxies M83, NGC 3351 and NGC 6384, including a number of circumnuclear HII regions (hot spots). Different age estimators (equivalent width of the Hbeta emission line W(Hb), Balmer line absorption profiles, UV spectra) provide consistently young ages (4-6 Myr) for the hot spots. We have detected the W-R bump feature at 4650 A in five of the objects, and in fewer cases possibly the WC features at 5696 A and 5808 A. Six additional objects showing W-R features are drawn from our previous work on extragalactic HII regions. From the measured luminosity of the W-R blue bump we estimate a small number of WN stars (from 1-2 to about 30). By assuming instantaneous bursts of star formation the ages derived from W(Hb) (3-6 Myr) and the strength of the W-R bump are in agreement with the predictions of evolutionary stellar population models, provided we account for stochastic effects on the IMF. From a comparison with published photoionization models based on synthetic cluster spectral energy distributions we find some evidence for an overestimation of the number of He ionizing photons in the model fluxes. In general, however, the massive star diagnostics are in agreement with the predictions of recent evolutionary models calculated with a Salpeter IMF and a high mass limit. We find no compelling evidence for a depletion of massive stars (M > 40-50 solar masses) in the IMF of metal-rich clusters, contrary to our previous conclusions based on older evolutionary models.
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