4.7 Article

A new mass-loss rate prescription for red supergiants

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 492, Issue 4, Pages 5994-6006

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa255

Keywords

stars: evolution; stars: massive; stars: mass-loss; supergiants; galaxies: clusters: individual

Funding

  1. Deutsches SOFIA Institut (DSI) under DLR [50 OK 0901]
  2. NASA [05 0064, NAS5-26555, NNA17BF53C]
  3. NASA through Hubble Fellowship - Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-HF2-51428]
  4. United States Air Force
  5. STFC [ST/L00061X/1, ST/F007159/1, ST/R000484/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Evolutionary models have shown the substantial effect that strong mass-loss rates (Ms) can have on the fate of massive stars. Red supergiant (RSG) mass-loss is poorly understood theoretically, and so stellar models rely on purely empirical M luminosity relations to calculate evolution, Empirical prescriptions usually scale with luminosity and effective temperature, but M should also depend on the current mass and hence the surface gravity of the star, yielding more than one possible M for the same position on the Itertzsprung Russell diagram. One can solve this degeneracy by measuring M for RSGs that reside in clusters, where age and initial mass (Minis) are known. In this paper we derive M values and luminosities for RSGs in two clusters, NGC 2004 and RSGC1. Using newly derived Minis measurements, we combine the results with those of clusters with a range of ages and derive an Minis-dependent M prescription. When comparing this new prescription to the treatment of mass-loss currently implemented in evolutionary models, we find models drastically overpredict the total mass-loss, by up to a factor of 20. Importantly, the most massive RSGs experience the largest downward revision in their mass-loss rates, drastically changing the impact of wind mass-loss on their evolution. Our results suggest that for most initial masses of RSG progenitors, quiescent mass-loss during the RSG phase is not effective at removing a significant fraction of the H-envelope prior to core-collapse, and we discuss the implications of this for stellar evolution and observations of SNe and SN progenitors.

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