The Evolution of Accreting Population III Stars at 10$^{-6}$-10$^3$ M$_\odot$/yr
Devesh Nandal, Lorenz Zwick, Daniel J. Whalen, Lucio Mayer, Sylvia, Ekstr\"om, Georges Meynet

TL;DR
This study explores how varying accretion rates influence the evolution and final masses of primordial Population III stars, revealing a critical transition rate leading to supermassive black hole formation through dark collapse.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the impact of accretion rates on Pop III star evolution and identifies a critical rate for supermassive black hole formation via dark collapse.
Findings
Final stellar mass depends on accretion rate and metallicity.
Below a certain rate, stars do not reach pair-instability supernovae mass.
High accretion rates lead to direct collapse into supermassive black holes.
Abstract
The first stars formed over five orders of magnitude in mass by accretion in primordial dark matter halos. We study the evolution of massive, very massive and supermassive primordial (Pop III) stars over nine orders of magnitude in accretion rate. We use the stellar evolution code GENEC to evolve accreting Pop III stars from 10 - 10 M/yr and study how these rates determine final masses. The stars are evolved until either the end of central Si burning or until they encounter the general relativistic instability (GRI). We also examine how metallicity affects the evolution of the stars. At rates below M/yr the final mass of the star falls below that required for pair-instability supernovae. The minimum rate required to produce black holes with masses above 250 M is M/yr, well within the range of infall rates found in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries
