Extreme helium stars form a sub-group within the broader category of
hydrogen-deficient stars. The latter includes cool
carbon stars like
R Coronae Borealis variables, helium-rich
spectral class O or B stars, population I
Wolf–Rayet stars,
AM CVn stars,
white dwarfs of spectral type WC, and transition stars like
PG 1159. The first known extreme helium star,
HD 124448, was discovered in 1942 by
Daniel M. Popper at the
McDonald Observatory near
Fort Davis, Texas, United States. This star displayed no lines of hydrogen in its spectrum, but strong helium lines as well as the presence of carbon and oxygen. The second,
PV Telescopii, was discovered in 1952, and the class of
PV Telescopii variables are all extreme helium stars. By 1996 a total of 25 candidates had been found. (This list was narrowed to 21 by 2006.) The known extreme helium stars are supergiants where hydrogen is underabundant by a factor of 10,000 or more. The surface temperatures of these stars range from 9,000–35,000 K. They are primarily composed of helium, with the second most abundant element, carbon, forming about one atom per 100 atoms of helium. The chemical composition of these stars implies that they have undergone both hydrogen and helium burning at some stage of their
evolution. ==Theoretical models==