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Evolving massive stars to core collapse with GENEC: Extension of equation of state, opacities and effective nuclear network

Griffiths, Adam; Aloy, Miguel-Á.; Hirschi, Raphael; Reichert, Moritz; Obergaulinger, Martin; Whitehead, Emily E.; Martinet, Sebastien; Sciarini, Luca; Ekström, Sylvia; Meynet, Georges

Authors

Adam Griffiths

Miguel-Á. Aloy

Moritz Reichert

Martin Obergaulinger

Emily E. Whitehead

Sebastien Martinet

Luca Sciarini

Sylvia Ekström

Georges Meynet



Abstract

Context. Stars with initial mass above roughly 8 M⊙ will evolve to form a core made of iron group elements, at which point no further exothermic nuclear reactions between charged nuclei may prevent the core collapse. Electron capture, neutrino losses, and the photo-disintegration of heavy nuclei trigger the collapse of these stars. Models at the brink of core collapse are produced using stellar evolution codes, and these pre-collapse models may be used in the study of the subsequent dynamical evolution (including their explosion as supernovae and the formation of compact remnants such as neutron stars or black holes).

Aims. We upgraded the physical ingredients employed by the GENeva stellar Evolution Code, GENEC, so that it covers the regime of high-temperatures and high-densities required to produce the progenitors of core-collapse. Our ultimate goal is producing pre-supernova models with GENEC, not only right before collapse, but also during the late phases (silicon and oxygen burning).

Methods. We have improved GENEC in three directions: equation of state, the nuclear reaction network, and the radiative and conductive opacities adapted for the computation of the advanced phases of evolution. We produce a small grid of pre-supernova models of stars with zero age main sequence masses of 15 M⊙, 20 M⊙, and 25 M⊙ at solar and less than half solar metallicities. The results are compared with analogous models produced with the MESA code.

Results. The global properties of our new models, particularly of their inner cores, are comparable to models computed with MESA and pre-existing progenitors in the literature. Between codes the exact shell structure varies, and impacts explosion predictions.

Conclusions. Using GENEC with state-of-the-art physics, we have produced massive stellar progenitors prior to collapse. These progenitors are suitable for follow-up studies, including the dynamical collapse and supernova phases. Larger grids of supernova progenitors are now feasible, with the potential for further dynamical evolution.

Citation

Griffiths, A., Aloy, M.-Á., Hirschi, R., Reichert, M., Obergaulinger, M., Whitehead, E. E., Martinet, S., Sciarini, L., Ekström, S., & Meynet, G. (2025). Evolving massive stars to core collapse with GENEC: Extension of equation of state, opacities and effective nuclear network. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 693, Article A93. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202451816

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 26, 2024
Online Publication Date Jan 7, 2025
Publication Date Jan 7, 2025
Deposit Date Apr 10, 2025
Journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
Print ISSN 0004-6361
Electronic ISSN 1432-0746
Publisher EDP Sciences
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 693
Article Number A93
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202451816
Keywords equation of state / nuclear reactions / nucleosynthesis / abundances / opacity / stars: evolution / stars: massive / supernovae: general
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1194800
Publisher URL https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2025/01/aa51816-24/aa51816-24.html