Evidence for quasi-chemically homogeneous evolution of massive stars up to solar metallicity
F. Martins (1), E. Depagne (2), D. Russeil (3), L. Mahy (4) (1- LUPM,, CNRS & Montpellier University, 2- Leibniz-Institut fur Astrophysik Potsdam,, 3- LAM, CNRS & Marseille University, 4- Li\`ege University)

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that chemically homogeneous evolution occurs in massive stars up to solar metallicity, which could explain the formation of long gamma-ray bursts across diverse environments.
Contribution
It demonstrates that CHE is possible at higher metallicities than previously confirmed, extending its relevance to solar metallicity environments.
Findings
CHE occurs in the LMC and Galaxy at near-solar metallicity.
Selected stars are core-H burning with surface abundances indicating CHE.
CHE may be a viable pathway for LGRB formation across various metallicities.
Abstract
Long soft gamma ray bursts (LGRBs) are usually associated with the death of the most massive stars. A large amount of core angular momentum in the phases preceding the explosion is required to form LGRBs. A very high initial rotational velocity can provide this angular momentum. Such a velocity strongly influences the way the star evolves: it is chemically homogeneously mixed and evolves directly towards the blue part of the HR diagram from the main sequence. We have shown that chemically homogeneous evolution (CHE) takes place in the SMC, at low metallicity. We want to see if there is a metallicity threshold above which such an evolution does not exist. We perform a spectroscopic analysis of H-rich early-type WN stars in the LMC and the Galaxy. We use the code CMFGEN to determine the fundamental properties and the surface composition of the target stars. We then place the stars in the…
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