General-relativistic instability in rapidly accreting supermassive stars in the presence of dark matter
Lionel Haemmerl\'e

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dark matter, especially WIMP annihilation, influences the general-relativistic instability in rapidly accreting supermassive stars, affecting their stability and potential to explain extreme quasars.
Contribution
It introduces a modified stability analysis incorporating dark matter effects, revealing conditions under which dark matter can stabilize or destabilize supermassive stars.
Findings
Dark matter can potentially remove the GR instability at high densities.
WIMP annihilation shifts the stability limit to higher stellar masses.
Stars with masses >10^6 M$_\odot$ can be stable if WIMP annihilation maintains low core temperatures.
Abstract
The collapse of supermassive stars (SMSs) via the general-relativistic (GR) instability would provide a natural explanation to the existence of the most extreme quasars. The presence of dark matter in SMSs is thought to potentially impact their properties, in particular their mass at collapse. Dark matter might be made of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) that can be captured by the gravitational potential well of SMSs due to interaction with the baryonic gas. The annihilation of WIMPs can provide fuel to support the star before H-burning ignition, favouring low densities of baryonic gas, long stellar lifetimes and high final masses. Here, we estimate the impact of dark matter on the GR dynamical stability of rapidly accreting SMSs. We add a dark matter term to the relativistic equation of adiabatic pulsations and apply it to hylotropic structures in order to determine the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
