Wolf-Rayet stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud as testbed for massive star evolution
Abel Schootemeijer, Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation channels of Wolf-Rayet stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud, using stellar evolution models to distinguish between binary interactions and single-star evolution, revealing that many likely result from binary stripping.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of observed SMC WR stars with stellar evolution models, highlighting the dominant role of binary interactions in their formation.
Findings
CHE cannot explain most SMC WR stars.
Some WR stars are consistent with chemically homogeneous evolution.
Steeper hydrogen gradients suggest binary stripping during common envelope phases.
Abstract
The majority of Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars represent the stripped cores of evolved massive stars who lost most of their hydrogen envelope. In low metallicity environments, such as the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), stellar winds are weaker and binary interaction is expected to dominate WR-star formation. However, the WR binary fraction appears to be ~40% at any metallicity. We use the recently determined physical properties of the twelve known SMC WR stars to explore their possible formation channels through comparisons with grids of SMC models, simulated with the detailed stellar evolution code MESA. These include models of rapidly rotating single stars, which experience (partial) chemically homogeneous evolution (CHE). We find that CHE is not able to account for the majority of the SMC WR stars. However, the apparently single WN star SMC AB12 and the double WR system SMC AB5 (HD 5980)…
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