Red supergiants (RSG) are key objects in studying the evolution of massive stars and their endpoints, but uncertainties related to their underlying mass-loss mechanism have stood in the way of an appropriate framework for massive star evolution thus far. In this work, we analyse a recently uncovered empirical mass-loss "kink"feature and we highlight its similarity to hot star radiation-driven wind models and observations at the optically thin-to-thick transition point. We motivate a new RSG mass-loss prescription that depends on the Eddington factor, F, (including both a steep luminosity, L, dependence and an inverse steep mass, Mcur, dependence). We subsequently implement this new RSG mass-loss prescription in the stellar evolution code MESA. We find that our physically motivated mass-loss behaviour naturally reproduces the Humphreys-Davidson limit without the need for any ad hoc tweaks. It also resolves the RSG supernova "problem". We argue that a universal behaviour that is seen for radiation-driven winds across the HR diagram, independent of the exact source of opacity, is a key feature of the evolution of the most massive stars.
CITATION STYLE
Vink, J. S., & Sabhahit, G. N. (2023). Exploring the Red Supergiant wind kink: A Universal mass-loss concept for massive stars. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 678. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347801
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