Massive star evolution in close binaries:conditions for homogeneous chemical evolution
H.F. Song, G. Meynet, A. Maeder, S. Ekstrom, P. Eggenberger

TL;DR
This paper explores how tidal interactions influence homogeneous evolution in massive stars within close binaries, highlighting conditions that prevent Roche lobe overflow and examining effects of metallicity and angular momentum transport.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the conditions for homogeneous evolution triggered by tidal interactions and the role of metallicity and internal coupling in massive binary star evolution.
Findings
Homogeneous evolution occurs when initial or synchronized rotation exceeds 250 km/s.
Higher metallicity enhances mixing and homogeneous evolution in close binaries.
Lower metallicity stars are more compact, reducing Roche lobe overflow risk.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of tidal interactions, before any mass transfer, on various properties of the stellar models. We study the conditions for obtaining homogeneous evolution triggered by tidal interactions, and for avoiding any Roche lobe overflow during the Main-Sequence phase. We consider the case of rotating stars computed with a strong coupling mediated by an interior magnetic field. In models without any tidal interaction (single stars and wide binaries), homogeneous evolution in solid body rotating models is obtained when two conditions are realized: the initial rotation must be high enough, the loss of angular momentum by stellar winds should be modest. This last point favors metal-poor fast rotating stars. In models with tidal interactions, homogeneous evolution is obtained when rotation imposed by synchronization is high enough (typically a time-averaged surface…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
