Metal-poor single Wolf-Rayet stars: The interplay of optically thick winds and rotation
Published in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2025
The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) hosts 12 known Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars, seven of which are apparently single. Their formation is a challenge for current stellar evolution models because line-driven winds are generally assumed to be quenched at a metallicity of Z ≤ 0.004. Here, we present a set of MESA models of single stars with zero-age main sequence masses of 20 − 80 M⊙ considering different initial rotation speeds (Ω = 0 − 0.7 Ωc), metallicities (Z = 0.002 − 0.0045), and wind mass-loss models (optically thin and thick winds). We show that if we account for optically thick winds, fast rotating (Ω ∼ 0.6 Ωc) single metal-poor O-type stars (with M ≳ 20 M⊙) shed their envelope and become WR stars even at the low metallicity of the SMC. The luminosity, effective temperature, evolutionary timescale, surface abundance, and rotational velocity of our simulated WR stars are compatible to the WRs observed in the SMC. We speculate that this scenario can also alleviate the excess of giant stars across the Humphreys-Davidson limit. Our results have key implications for black hole masses, (pair instability) supernova explosions, and other observable signatures.
Recommended citation: Boco et al. (2025), Metal-poor single Wolf-Rayet stars: The interplay of optically thick winds and rotation, Astronomy and Astrophysics
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