Convective-core overshooting and the final fate of massive stars
D. Temaj, F.R.N. Schneider, E. Laplace, D. Wei, Ph. Podsiadlowski

TL;DR
This study explores how convective boundary mixing influences the final structure and explosion outcomes of massive stars, with implications for black hole formation and supernova observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the impact of convective core overshooting on pre-supernova star models and their explosion properties using the MESA code.
Findings
Larger overshooting shifts the compactness peak by 1-2 M_sun.
Predicted black hole formation occurs in specific luminosity ranges.
Convective overshooting affects supernova lightcurve features.
Abstract
Massive stars can explode in powerful supernovae (SNe) forming neutron stars but they may also collapse directly into black holes (BHs). Understanding and predicting their final fate is increasingly important, e.g, in the context of gravitational-wave astronomy. The interior mixing of stars in general and convective boundary mixing remain some of the largest uncertainties in their evolution. Here, we investigate the influence of convective boundary mixing on the pre-SN structure and explosion properties of massive stars. Using the 1D stellar evolution code Mesa, we model single, non-rotating stars of solar metallicity with initial masses of and convective core step-overshooting of . Stars are evolved until the onset of iron core collapse, and the pre-SN models are exploded using a parametric, semi-analytic SN code. We use the compactness…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
