Enhanced Mass Loss of Very Massive Stars: Impact on the Evolution, Binary Processes, and Remnant Mass Spectrum
Kendall G. Shepherd, Guglielmo Costa, Cristiano Ugolini, Guglielmo Volpato, Diego Bossini, Cecilia Sgalletta, Francesco Addari, Alessandro Bressan, Leo Girardi, and Mario Spera

TL;DR
This paper explores how enhanced stellar winds in very massive stars affect their evolution, binary interactions, and black hole formation, providing improved models that align better with observations and gravitational wave data.
Contribution
It introduces new wind prescriptions sensitive to the Eddington parameter into stellar evolution models, impacting the understanding of VMS and black hole populations.
Findings
Enhanced winds improve VMS property predictions.
Binary mergers can explain the most massive stars like R136a1.
Enhanced winds limit black hole masses above the pair-instability gap.
Abstract
Very massive stars (VMS) play a fundamental role in astrophysics due to their winds and supernovae (SN), and their role as massive black hole (BH) progenitors. However, their origin and evolution remain a significant challenge. Recent theoretical work and observations suggest that VMS approaching the Eddington limit may experience mass loss above the standard wind predictions. This study investigates how enhanced winds influence single and binary VMS evolution, observable properties, and resulting BH populations. New stellar wind prescriptions, sensitive to the Eddington parameter () and the luminosity-to-mass ratio, were implemented into the stellar evolution code PARSEC v2.0. These updated single-star tracks (100 - 600 M at Z=0.006) were used to model the VMS population in the Tarantula Nebula and integrated into the SEVN binary evolution code. The…
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