On The Maximum Mass of Stellar Black Holes
Krzysztof Belczynski, Tomasz Bulik, Chris L. Fryer, Ashley Ruiter,, Francesca Valsecchi, Jorick S. Vink, Jarrod R. Hurley

TL;DR
This paper models the maximum mass of stellar black holes based on metallicity and wind mass loss rates, showing that stellar evolution can explain observed black hole masses up to 80 solar masses.
Contribution
It provides a detailed calculation of how maximum black hole mass depends on metallicity and wind mass loss, aligning models with observed black hole masses.
Findings
Maximum black hole mass at high metallicity is about 15 Msun.
At moderate metallicity, maximum black hole mass reaches 30 Msun.
At very low metallicity, black holes can be as massive as 80 Msun.
Abstract
We present the spectrum of compact object masses: neutron stars and black holes that originate from single stars in different environments. In particular, we calculate the dependence of maximum black hole mass on metallicity and on some specific wind mass loss rates (e.g., Hurley et al. and Vink et al.). Our calculations show that the highest mass black holes observed in the Galaxy M_bh = 15 Msun in the high metallicity environment (Z=Zsun=0.02) can be explained with stellar models and the wind mass loss rates adopted here. To reach this result we had to set Luminous Blue Variable mass loss rates at the level of about 0.0001 Msun/yr and to employ metallicity dependent Wolf-Rayet winds. With such winds, calibrated on Galactic black hole mass measurements, the maximum black hole mass obtained for moderate metallicity (Z=0.3 Zsun=0.006) is M_bh,max = 30 Msun. This is a rather striking…
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