Abstract

About 20% of the high mass O-type stars in the Galaxy are found outside stellar clusters and associations. In the solar neighbourhood this fraction amounts to 43 O-type stars. In the framework of high-mass star formation, we search for the origins of these stars. We aim at separating the O-type field stars from runaway O-type stars, where the former does not betray any indication of past dynamical interactions resulting in their present field location. We specifically search for the presence of stellar clusters, but also evaluate spatial velocities, distance from Galactic plane, locations in the Galaxy with respect to young stellar clusters. Among our sample of 43, we find that 5 stars are in fact observed in the K-band to be members of previously unnoticed small clusters. On the other hand it is plausible that nearly half the sample (22 objects) could have undergone a dynamical ejection from a young cluster. Based on the current available data, of the Galactic O-type stars cannot be associated with a stellar cluster. Finally by assuming that stars form in clusters with a power law in membership number with index −1.7 down to “clusters” consisting of single stars, we calculate the expected statistics regarding isolated O stars and O stars in OB-associations. We conclude that the results of the calculations are consistent with the observed statistics of O-type stars.

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