Very low metallicity massive star models: Pre-SN evolution and primary nitrogen production
Raphael Hirschi (University of Basel, Switzerland)

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of very low metallicity massive stars, revealing primary nitrogen production, mass loss effects, and potential supernova types at extremely low metallicities, with implications for early universe chemical enrichment.
Contribution
It introduces detailed stellar evolution models at extremely low metallicities, highlighting primary nitrogen production and mass loss processes influenced by rotation and surface enrichment.
Findings
Primary nitrogen is produced during helium burning in low-metallicity stars.
Mass loss during the red supergiant stage affects the final stellar remnants.
Models predict supernova types and gamma-ray bursts at very low metallicities.
Abstract
Two series of models were computed. The first series consists of 20 solar mass models with varying initial metallicity (Z=0.02 down to Z=10^{-8}) and rotation (V_{ini}=0-600 km/s). The second one consists of models with an initial metallicity of Z=10^{-8}, masses between 9 and 85 solar masses and fast initial rotation velocities (V_{ini}=600-800 km/s). The most interesting models are the models with Z=10^{-8} ([Fe/H]~-6.6). In the course of helium burning, carbon and oxygen are mixed into the hydrogen burning shell. This boosts the importance of the shell and causes a reduction of the CO core mass. Later in the evolution, the hydrogen shell deepens and produces large amount of primary nitrogen. For the most massive models (M>~60 solar masses), significant mass loss occurs during the red supergiant stage. This mass loss is due to the surface enrichment in CNO elements via rotational…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
