It's written in the massive stars: The role of stellar physics in the formation of black holes
E. Laplace, F. R. N. Schneider, and Ph. Podsiadlowski

TL;DR
This paper investigates how stellar physics influences the core structure of massive stars, affecting black hole formation, by modeling stars from 17 to 50 solar masses and analyzing core burning processes and shell mergers.
Contribution
It identifies the physical mechanisms, like core burning stages and shell mergers, that determine the final core structure of massive stars relevant for black hole formation.
Findings
Core carbon and neon burning increase compactness.
Shell mergers decrease compactness.
Final core structure is set at core helium exhaustion.
Abstract
In the age of gravitational-wave (GW) sources and newly discovered local black holes (BH) and neutron stars (NS), understanding the fate of stars is a key question. Not every massive star is expected to successfully explode as a supernova and leave behind a NS; some stars form BHs. The remnant depends on explosion physics but also on the final core structure, often summarized by the compactness parameter or iron core mass, where high values have been linked to BH formation. Several groups have reported similar patterns in these parameters as a function of mass, characterized by a prominent compactness peak followed by another peak at higher masses, pointing to a common underlying physical mechanism. Here, we investigate its origin by computing single-star models from 17 to 50 solar masses with MESA. The first and second compactness increases originate from core carbon and neon burning,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory
