Wind modelling of very massive stars up to 300 solar masses
Jorick S. Vink (Armagh Observatory), L.E. Muijres, B. Anthonisse, A., de Koter, G. Graefener, N. Langer

TL;DR
This study presents new Monte Carlo models for mass loss in very massive stars up to 300 solar masses, revealing a transition in wind properties and spectral features at high luminosities and Eddington factors, challenging existing mass-loss assumptions.
Contribution
Introduces a dynamical approach to model mass loss in very massive stars, showing a transition in wind characteristics and spectral morphology at high Eddington factors.
Findings
Mass-loss rates increase sharply at high Gamma, surpassing the single-scattering limit.
Transition from O-type to Wolf-Rayet wind features occurs at optical thickness threshold.
Mass-loss dependence on Gamma is consistent with a power-law Mdot ∝ Gamma^5.
Abstract
Some studies have claimed a universal stellar upper-mass limit of 150 Msun. A factor that is often overlooked is that there might be a difference between the current and initial masses of the most massive stars, as a result of mass loss. We present Monte Carlo mass-loss predictions for very massive stars in the range 40-300 Msun, with large luminosities and Eddington factors Gamma. Using our new dynamical approach, we find an upturn in the mass-loss vs. Gamma dependence, at the point where the winds become optically thick. This coincides with the location where wind efficiency numbers surpass the single-scattering limit of Eta = 1, reaching values up to Eta = 2.5. Our modelling suggests a transition from common O-type winds to Wolf-Rayet characteristics at the point where the winds become optically thick. This transitional behaviour is also revealed with respect to the wind acceleration…
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