Stripped-Envelope Stars in Different Metallicity Environments I. Evolutionary Phases, Classification and Populations
David R. Aguilera-Dena, Norbert Langer, John Antoniadis, Daniel Pauli,, Luc Dessart, Alejandro Vigna-G\'omez, G\"otz Gr\"afener, and Sung-Chul Yoon

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of stripped-envelope massive stars across various metallicities, classifies their types, and predicts their populations and ratios in different environments, enhancing understanding of their observational characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces detailed evolutionary models for helium stars, classifies their types based on surface composition, and predicts population ratios across metallicities, linking theory with observations.
Findings
Carbon-rich models have optically thick winds matching observed luminosity distributions.
Number of Wolf-Rayet stars increases with metallicity, while transparent-wind stars decrease.
Population ratios are more influenced by transition luminosity than by metallicity-dependent mass loss.
Abstract
Massive stars that become stripped of their hydrogen envelope through binary interaction or winds can be observed either as Wolf-Rayet stars, if they have optically thick winds, or as transparent-wind stripped-envelope stars. We approximate their evolution through evolutionary models of single helium stars, and compute detailed model grids in the initial mass range 1.5 to 70 M for metallicities between 0.01 and 0.04, from core helium ignition until core collapse. Throughout their lifetime, some stellar models expose the ashes of helium burning. We propose that models that have nitrogen-rich envelopes are candidate WN stars, while models with a carbon-rich surface are candidate WC stars during core helium burning, and WO stars afterwards. We measure metallicity dependance of the total lifetime of our models and the duration of their evolutionary phases. We propose an analytic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
