The evolution of runaway stellar collision products
E. Glebbeek, E. Gaburov, S. E. de Mink, O. R. Pols, S. F. Portegies, Zwart

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of stellar merger remnants in dense clusters to assess their potential to form intermediate-mass black holes, considering metallicity effects and stellar wind mass loss.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar evolution models of merger remnants, including metallicity effects and mass loss, to evaluate black hole formation scenarios in dense star clusters.
Findings
Mass loss dominates over mass gain in high metallicity models.
High metallicity remnants do not form intermediate-mass black holes.
Low metallicity remnants may explode as pair creation supernovae.
Abstract
In the cores of young dense star clusters repeated stellar collisions involving the same object can occur, which has been suggested to lead to the formation of an intermediate-mass black hole. In order to verify this scenario we compute the detailed evolution of the merger remnant of three sequences. We follow the evolution until the onset of carbon burning and estimate the final remnant mass to determine the ultimate fate of a runaway merger sequence. We use a detailed stellar evolution code to follow the evolution of the collision product. At each collision, we mix the two colliding stars, taking account of mass loss during the collision. During the stellar evolution we apply mass loss rates from the literature, as appropriate for the evolutionary stage of the merger remnant. We compute models for high () and low () metallicity to quantify metallicity effects. We…
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