How Massive Single Stars End Their Life
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory · University of Chicago · +4 more institutions
Abstract
How massive stars die - what sort of explosion and remnant each produces - depends chiefly on the masses of their helium cores and hydrogen envelopes at death. For single stars, stellar winds are the only means of mass loss, and these are chiefly a function of the metallicity of the star. We dicuss how meallicity, and a simplified prescription for its effect on mass loss, affects the evolution and final fate of massive stars. We map, as a function of mass and metallicity, where black holes and neutron stars are likely to form and where different types of supernovae are produced. Intergrating over an initial mass function, we derive the relative populations as a function of metallicity. Provided single stars…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 95
Authors
5- AHAlexander HegerCorresponding
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, University of Chicago, Los Alamos National Laboratory
- CLChris L. Fryer
Los Alamos National Laboratory
- SES. E. Woosley
University of California, Santa Cruz
- NLN. Langer
Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy
- DHD. H. Hartmann
Clemson University
Topics & keywords
- Metallicity
- Physics
- Stars
- Astrophysics
- Supernova
- Initial mass function
- Neutron star
- Stellar mass loss