Carbon from massive binary-stripped stars over cosmic time: effect of metallicity
Jing-Ze Ma, Rob Farmer, Selma E. de Mink, Eva Laplace

TL;DR
This study investigates how metallicity influences carbon yields from massive binary-stripped stars over cosmic time, revealing that metallicity dominates over binarity effects and challenging previous assumptions about their role in early universe carbon enrichment.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of carbon yields from binary-stripped massive stars across a range of metallicities, highlighting the dominant role of metallicity and cautioning against extrapolating solar metallicity yields to lower metallicities.
Findings
Metallicity is the primary factor affecting carbon yields.
Binary effects are minimal at low metallicities.
Binary-stripped stars are unlikely to explain early universe carbon enrichment.
Abstract
The origin of carbon in the Universe remains uncertain. At solar metallicity, binary-stripped massive stars -- stars that lost their envelope through stable interaction with a companion -- have been suggested to produce twice as much carbon as their single-star counterparts. However, understanding the chemical evolution of galaxies over cosmic time requires examining stellar yields across a range of metallicities. Using the stellar evolution code MESA, we compute the carbon yields from wind mass loss and supernova explosions of single and binary-stripped stars across a wide range of initial masses (-), metallicities (, , ), and initial orbital periods (- days). We find that metallicity is the dominant factor influencing the carbon yields of massive stars, outweighing the effects of binarity and detailed orbital parameters. Since the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
