A study of the effect of rotational mixing on massive stars evolution: surface abundances of Galactic O7-8 giant stars
F. Martins (1), S. Simon-Diaz (2), R.H. Barba (3), R.C. Gamen (4), S., Ekstroem (5) ((1) LUPM, CNRS, Montpellier University, (2) IAC, La, Laguna University, (3) La Serena University, (4) CONICET--UNLP, (5) Geneva, Observatory)

TL;DR
This study investigates how rotation influences the surface chemical composition of Galactic O7-8 giant stars, testing evolutionary models and revealing that rotation and differential rotation significantly affect surface abundances.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence supporting models that include rotation and differential rotation effects in massive star evolution, especially at solar metallicity.
Findings
Stars with >100 km/s rotation show N/C ratios ten times initial value.
Surface enrichment correlates with initial mass and rotational velocity.
Models including rotation and differential rotation can explain observed surface abundances.
Abstract
Massive star evolution remains only partly constrained. In particular, the exact role of rotation has been questioned by puzzling properties of OB stars in the Magellanic Clouds. Our goal is to study the relation between surface chemical composition and rotational velocity, and to test predictions of evolutionary models including rotation. We have performed a spectroscopic analysis of a sample of fifteen Galactic O7-8 giant stars. This sample is homogeneous in terms of mass, metallicity and evolutionary state. It is made of stars with a wide range of projected rotational velocities. We show that the sample stars are located on the second half of the main sequence, in a relatively narrow mass range (25-40 Msun). Almost all stars with projected rotational velocities above 100 km/s have N/C ratios about ten times the initial value. Below 100 km/s a wide range of N/C values is observed. The…
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