4.6 Article

On the Maximum Stellar Rotation to form a Black Hole without an Accompanying Luminous Transient

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 901, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/abb818

Keywords

Relativistic disks; Accretion; Massive stars; Hydrodynamical simulations; General relativity

Funding

  1. UCMEXUS-CONACYT Doctoral Fellowship
  2. NASA TCAN award [TCAN-80NSSC18K1488]
  3. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF132]
  4. program Ctedras CONACYT para Jvenes Investigadores
  5. Heising-Simons Foundation
  6. NSF [AST-1911206, AST-1852393, AST-1515982, OAC-1515969]
  7. Australian Research Council [FT190100574]
  8. Polish National Science Center [DEC-2016/23/B/ST9/03114]
  9. NASA TCAN [TCAN-80NSSC18K1488]
  10. National Science Foundation [1339067]
  11. Eugene V. Cota-Robles Fellowship
  12. NSF MRI [AST 1828315]
  13. Australian Research Council [FT190100574] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
  14. Direct For Education and Human Resources
  15. Division Of Graduate Education [1339067] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The collapse of a massive star with low angular momentum content is commonly thought to result in the formation of a black hole without an accompanying bright transient. Our goal in this Letter is to understand the flow in and around a newly formed black hole, involving accretion and rotation, via general relativistic hydrodynamics simulations aimed at studying the conditions under which infalling material can accrete without forming a centrifugally supported structure and, as a result, generate no effective feedback. On the other hand, if the feedback from the black hole is significant, the collapse would be halted and we suggest that the event is likely to be followed by a bright transient. We find that feedback is only efficient if the specific angular momentum of the infalling material at the innermost stable circular orbit exceeds that of geodesic circular flow at that radius by at least 20%. We use the results of our simulations to constrain the maximal stellar rotation rates of the disappearing massive progenitors PHL293B-LBV and N6946-BH1, and to provide an estimate of the overall rate of disappearing massive stars. We find that about a few percent of single O-type stars with measured rotational velocities are expected to spin below the critical value before collapse and are thus predicted to vanish without a trace.

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