The evolution of rotating very massive stars with LMC composition
K. K\"ohler, N. Langer, A. de Koter, S.E. de Mink, P.A. Crowther, C.J., Evans, G. Gr\"afener, H. Sana, D. Sanyal, F.R.N. Schneider, J.S. Vink

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of very massive, rotating stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing effects of rotation, mass loss, and envelope inflation on their evolution and end states.
Contribution
It provides a detailed grid of stellar models including rotation and magnetic effects specific to LMC composition, highlighting the impact on evolution and supernova outcomes.
Findings
Rapid rotation causes quasi-chemically homogeneous evolution.
Envelope inflation affects surface temperature and mass loss.
Stars above 150 M_sun evolve into helium stars, avoiding pair-instability supernovae.
Abstract
We present a dense model grid with tailored input chemical composition appropriate for the Large Magellanic Cloud. We use a one-dimensional hydrodynamic stellar evolution code, which accounts for rotation, transport of angular momentum by magnetic fields, and stellar wind mass loss to compute our detailed models. We calculate stellar evolution models with initial masses of 70-500 Msun and with initial surface rotational velocities of 0-550 km/s, covering the core-hydrogen burning phase of evolution. We find our rapid rotators to be strongly influenced by rotationally induced mixing of helium, with quasi-chemically homogeneous evolution occurring for the fastest rotating models. Above 160 Msun, homogeneous evolution is also established through mass loss, producing pure helium stars at core hydrogen exhaustion independent of the initial rotation rate. Surface nitrogen enrichment is also…
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