Magnetic massive stars as progenitors of "heavy" stellar-mass black holes
V. Petit, Z. Keszthelyi, R. MacInnis, D. H. Cohen, R. H. D. Townsend,, G. A. Wade, S. L. Thomas, S. P. Owocki, J. Puls, J. A. ud-Doula

TL;DR
This paper proposes that magnetic fields in massive stars can lead to the formation of heavy stellar-mass black holes at solar metallicity by reducing mass loss, challenging the notion that low metallicity environments are necessary.
Contribution
It introduces new stellar evolution models that incorporate magnetic field effects at solar metallicity, showing increased final masses of massive stars.
Findings
Magnetic fields significantly reduce mass loss in massive stars.
Magnetic models predict higher terminal masses than non-magnetic ones.
Heavy black holes can form in solar-metallicity environments with magnetic fields.
Abstract
The groundbreaking detection of gravitational waves produced by the inspiralling and coalescence of the black hole (BH) binary GW150914 confirms the existence of "heavy" stellar-mass BHs with masses >25 Msun. Initial modelling of the system by Abbott et al. (2016a) supposes that the formation of black holes with such large masses from the evolution of single massive stars is only feasible if the wind mass-loss rates of the progenitors were greatly reduced relative to the mass-loss rates of massive stars in the Galaxy, concluding that heavy BHs must form in low-metallicity (Z < 0.25-0.5 Zsun) environments. However, strong surface magnetic fields also provide a powerful mechanism for modifying mass loss and rotation of massive stars, independent of environmental metallicity (ud-Doula & Owocki 2002; ud-Doula et al. 2008). In this paper we explore the hypothesis that some heavy BHs, with…
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