The Potential of Asteroseismology to Resolve the Blue Supergiant Problem
Earl Patrick Bellinger, Selma E. de Mink, Walter E. van Rossem, and, Stephen Justham

TL;DR
This paper explores how asteroseismology can differentiate internal structures of blue supergiants, potentially resolving the discrepancy between observations and stellar evolution models by analyzing their oscillation modes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that asteroseismic measurements can distinguish between different evolutionary scenarios of blue supergiants based on their internal structures and oscillation period spacings.
Findings
g-mode period spacings differ by an order of magnitude between scenarios
Observable changes in high-frequency modes could reveal internal structure
Long-term asteroseismic monitoring can identify binary merger products
Abstract
Despite major progress in our understanding of massive stars, concerning discrepancies still remain between observations and theory. Most notable are the numerous stars observed beyond the theoretical main sequence, an evolutionary phase expected to be short-lived and hence sparsely populated. This is the "Blue Supergiant Problem." Stellar models with abnormal internal structures can provide long-lived solutions for this problem: core hydrogen-burning stars with oversized cores may explain the hotter ones, and core helium-burning stars with undersized cores may explain the cooler ones. Such stars may result from enhanced or suppressed mixing in single stars, or, more likely, as the products of binary interaction and stellar mergers. Here we investigate the potential of asteroseismology to uncover the nature of blue supergiants. We construct stellar models for the above scenarios and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
