Pulsational instability of yellow hypergiants
Yuri A. Fadeyev

TL;DR
This study investigates the pulsational stability of yellow hypergiants during their post-main sequence evolution, revealing conditions under which they become unstable or stable against radial oscillations due to internal physical mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the conditions and mechanisms driving pulsational instability in yellow hypergiants during specific evolutionary phases.
Findings
Yellow hypergiants are unstable against radial oscillations during outer layer expansion.
Pulsation periods do not exceed 200 days during expansion and 130 days during contraction.
Instability is driven by the -mechanism in helium ionization zones.
Abstract
Instability of population I (X=0.7, Y=0.02) massive stars against radial oscillations during the post-main sequence gravitational contraction of the helium core is investigated. Initial stellar masses are in the range from 65M_\odot to 90M_\odot. In hydrodynamic computations of self-exciting stellar oscillations we assumed that energy transfer in the envelope of the pulsating star is due to radiative heat conduction and convection. The convective heat transfer was treated in the framework of the theory of time-dependent turbulent convection. During evolutionary expansion of outer layers after hydrogen exhaustion in the stellar core the star is shown to be unstable against radial oscillations while its effective temperature is Teff > 6700K for Mzams=65M_\odot and Teff > 7200K for mzams=90M_\odot. Pulsational instability is due to the \kappa-mechanism in helium ionization zones and at…
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