The evolution of massive stars and their spectra I. A non-rotating 60 Msun star from the zero-age main sequence to the pre-supernova stage
Jose Groh (Geneva), Georges Meynet (Geneva), Sylvia Ekstrom (Geneva),, Cyril Georgy (Keele)

TL;DR
This study models the entire evolution of a non-rotating 60 solar mass star from ZAMS to pre-supernova, linking interior changes to observable spectra and phases, revealing a complex evolutionary sequence with implications for understanding massive star life cycles.
Contribution
It combines stellar evolution and atmospheric models to produce synthetic spectra throughout the star's life, providing new insights into spectral phase durations and evolution.
Findings
Identified a detailed spectral evolution sequence from O3 I to WO.
Found longer LBV phase and varied WN phase durations compared to previous models.
Demonstrated LBVs naturally arise at the end of the main sequence in single-star evolution.
Abstract
For the first time, the interior and spectroscopic evolution of a massive star is analyzed from the zero-age main sequence (ZAMS) to the pre-supernova (SN) stage. For this purpose, we combined stellar evolution models using the Geneva code and atmospheric models using CMFGEN. With our approach, we were able to produce observables, such as a synthetic high-resolution spectrum and photometry, aiding the comparison between evolution models and observed data. Here we analyze the evolution of a non-rotating 60 Msun star and its spectrum throughout its lifetime. Interestingly, the star has a supergiant appearance (luminosity class I) even at the ZAMS. We find the following evolutionary sequence of spectral types: O3 I (at the ZAMS), O4 I (middle of the H-core burning phase), B supergiant (BSG), B hypergiant (BHG), hot luminous blue variable (LBV; end of H-core burning), cool LBV (H-shell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
