Massive stars are essential to understand a variety of branches of astronomy
including galaxy and star cluster evolution, nucleosynthesis and supernovae,
pulsars and black holes. It has become evident that massive star evolution is
very diverse, being sensitive to metallicity, binarity, rotation, and possibly
magnetic fields. While the problem to obtain a good statistical observational
database is alleviated by current large spectroscopic surveys, it remains a
challenge to model these diverse paths of massive stars towards their violent
end stage.
We show that the main sequence stage offers the best opportunity to gauge the
relevance of the various possible evolutionary scenarios. This also allows to
sketch the post-main sequence evolution of massive stars, for which
observations of Wolf-Rayet stars give essential clues. Recent supernova
discoveries due to the current boost in transient searches allow tentative
mappings of progenitor models with supernova types, including pair instability
supernovae and gamma-ray bursts.Comment: 57 pages, 10 figures; free link to complete published paper:
http://www.annualreviews.org/eprint/kf2CFBEBKi93fbcGJCBW/full/10.1146/annurev-astro-081811-12553