Thermal wind emission in the form of free-free and free-bound emission is
known to show up in the infrared and radio continuum of hot and massive stars.
For OB supergiants with moderate mass loss rates and a wind velocity
distribution with \beta = 0.8...1.0, no influence of the wind to the optical
continuum, i.e. for \lambda < 1 micron, is expected. Investigations of stellar
and wind parameters of OB supergiants over the last few years suggest, however,
that for many objects \beta is much higher than 1.0, reaching values up to 3.5.
We investigate the influence of the free-free and free-bound emission on the
emerging radiation, especially at optical wavelengths, from OB supergiants
having wind velocity distributions with \beta > 1. For the case of a
spherically symmetric, isothermal wind in local thermodynamical equilibrium
(LTE) we calculate the free-free and free-bound processes and the emerging wind
and total continuum spectra. We localize the generation region of the optical
wind continuum and especially focus on the influence of a \beta-type wind
velocity distribution with \beta > 1 on the formation of the wind continuum at
optical wavelengths. The optical wind continuum is found to be generated within
about 2 R_* which is exactly the wind region where \beta strongly influences
the density distribution. We find that for \beta > 1, the continuum of a
typical OB supergiant can indeed be contaminated with thermal wind emission,
even at optical wavelengths. The strong increase in the optical wind emission
is dominantly produced by free-bound processes.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&