The impact of mass-loss on the evolution and pre-supernova properties of red supergiants
G. Meynet, V. Chomienne, S. Ekstr\"om, C. Georgy, A. Granada, J. Groh,, A. Maeder, P. Eggenberger, E. Levesque, P. Massey

TL;DR
This study investigates how varying mass-loss rates during the red supergiant phase influence the evolution, surface properties, and pre-supernova characteristics of massive stars, highlighting the importance of mass-loss in stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the effects of different mass-loss rates and rotation velocities on RSG evolution and pre-supernova properties, improving understanding of progenitor diversity.
Findings
Enhanced mass-loss rates alter RSG lifetimes and populations.
Post RSG stars have lower surface rotation velocities.
Progenitor types (red, yellow, blue) depend on hydrogen envelope mass.
Abstract
The post main-sequence evolution of massive stars is very sensitive to many parameters of the stellar models. Key parameters are the mixing processes, the metallicity, the mass-loss rate and the effect of a close companion. We study how the red supergiant lifetimes, the tracks in the Hertzsprung-Russel diagram (HRD), the positions in this diagram of the pre-supernova progenitor as well as the structure of the stars at that time change for various mass-loss rates during the red supergiant phase (RSG), and for two different initial rotation velocities. The surface abundances of RSGs are much more sensitive to rotation than to the mass-loss rates during that phase. A change of the RSG mass-loss rate has a strong impact on the RSG lifetimes and therefore on the luminosity function of RSGs. At solar metallicity, the enhanced mass-loss rate models do produce significant changes on the…
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