Superadiabaticity and the metallicity independence of the Humphreys-Davidson limit
Gautham N. Sabhahit, Jorick S. Vink, Erin R. Higgins, Andreas A. C., Sander

TL;DR
This study investigates how excess mixing in superadiabatic layers influences the upper luminosity limit of red supergiants across different metallicities, revealing a potential metallicity-independent boundary due to competing effects.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of excess mixing effects in massive star evolution models at various metallicities, highlighting their role in the Humphreys-Davidson limit.
Findings
Excess mixing is stronger at lower metallicities.
Lower metallicity shifts cutoff luminosities to lower values.
Opposing effects of mass loss and mixing may produce a metallicity-independent limit.
Abstract
The Humphreys-Davidson (HD) limit sets the boundary between evolutionary channels of massive stars that either end their lives as red supergiants (RSGs) or as the hotter blue supergiants (BSGs) and Wolf-Rayet stars. Mixing in the envelopes of massive stars close to their Eddington limit is crucial for investigating the upper luminosity limit of the coolest supergiants. We study the effects of excess mixing in superadiabatic layers that are dominated by radiation pressure, and we critically investigate the effects of mixing and mass loss on the evolution of RSGs with log (Teff/K) < 3.68 - as a function of metallicity. Using MESA, we produce grids of massive star models at three metallicities: Galactic (Zsol), LMC (1/2 Zsol) and SMC (1/5 Zsol), with both high and low amounts of overshooting to study the upper luminosity limit of RSGs. We systematically study the effects of excess mixing…
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