SPINSTARS at low metallicities
G. Meynet, S. Ekstrom, A. Maeder, R. Hirschi, C. Chiappini, C. Georgy

TL;DR
This paper investigates how axial rotation influences the evolution of low-metallicity massive stars, highlighting enhanced internal mixing, primary nitrogen production, and rotation-induced mass loss mechanisms, especially at very low metallicities.
Contribution
It presents new models showing how rotation causes significant primary nitrogen synthesis and mass loss in very metal poor massive stars, extending understanding of early stellar evolution.
Findings
Rotation induces strong internal mixing and primary nitrogen production.
Rotation-triggered mass loss mechanisms depend on metallicity and rotation speed.
Effects are prominent at metallicities between 10^{-8} and 0.001.
Abstract
The main effect of axial rotation on the evolution of massive PopIII stars is to trigger internal mixing processes which allow stars to produce significant amounts of primary nitrogen 14 and carbon 13. Very metal poor massive stars produce much more primary nitrogen than PopIII stars for a given initial mass and rotation velocity. The very metal poor stars undergo strong mass loss induced by rotation. One can distinguish two types of rotationnaly enhanced stellar winds: 1) Rotationally mechanical winds occurs when the surface velocity reaches the critical velocity at the equator, {\it i.e.} the velocity at which the centrifugal acceleration is equal to the gravity; 2) Rotationally radiatively line driven winds are a consequence of strong internal mixing which brings large amounts of CNO elements at the surface. This enhances the opacity and may trigger strong line driven winds. These…
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