The evolutionary status of the blue hook stars in Omega Centauri
Francesca D'Antona, Vittoria Caloi, Paolo Ventura

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of blue hook stars in Omega Centauri, showing that high helium content in their envelopes leads to distinctive evolutionary tracks and explaining their observed properties.
Contribution
It introduces new evolutionary tracks for high-helium stars that explain the blue hook stars' location and shape in the HR diagram, linking them to deep mixing during red giant evolution.
Findings
High helium envelope fractions (>0.5) alter stellar evolution tracks.
Blue hook stars can be explained by progenitors with Y=0.65-0.80.
Deep mixing during red giant phase increases surface helium abundance.
Abstract
Core helium burning is the dominant source of energy of extreme horizontal branch stars, as the hydrogen envelope is too small to contribute to the nuclear energy output. The evolution of each mass in the HR diagram occurs along vertical tracks that, when the core helium is consumed, evolve to higher Teff and then to the white dwarf stage. The larger is the mass, the smaller is the Teff of the models, so that the zero age horizontal branch (ZAHB) is "horizontal". In this paper we show that, if the helium mass fraction (Y) of the envelope is larger than Y~0.5, the shape of the tracks changes completely: the hydrogen burning becomes efficient again also for very small envelope masses, thanks to the higher molecular weight and to the higher temperatures of the hydrogen shell. The larger is Y, the smaller is the envelope mass that provides strong H-shell burning. These tracks have a curled…
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