A comprehensive grid of massive binary evolution models for the Galaxy - Surface properties of post-mass transfer stars
Harim Jin, Norbert Langer, Andrea Ercolino, Selma E. de Mink

TL;DR
This study presents an extensive grid of over 38,000 binary star evolution models in the Galaxy, focusing on surface properties of post-mass transfer stars across various evolutionary stages, with implications for supernova progenitors and stellar populations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive set of binary evolution models with detailed physics, including a new nuclear network, to analyze surface properties and evolutionary outcomes of post-mass transfer stars.
Findings
Mass gainers and donors can become long-lived blue and yellow supergiants.
Some gainers evolve into more luminous supergiants before supernova.
Surface abundances help distinguish binary products from single stars.
Abstract
Massive stars often evolve in binary systems, in which binary interactions significantly affect their evolution. Massive stars in the Galaxy serve as valuable testbeds for this due to their proximity. We computed the evolution of more than 38000 galactic binary systems with initial primary star masses of 5...100 Msun. In this paper, we aim to investigate the surface properties of post-mass transfer mass donor and mass gainer stars through core hydrogen burning, core helium burning, and for the pre-supernova stage. The models are computed with MESA, incorporating detailed stellar and binary physics, including internal differential rotation, magnetic angular momentum transport, mass-dependent overshooting, stellar wind mass-loss, mass and angular momentum transfer and tidal interaction. They incorporate a new extensive nuclear network for hydrogen burning, which allows us to track the…
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