(Abridged) Stars more massive than 20−30M⊙ are so luminous that the
radiation force on the cooler, more opaque outer layers can balance or exceed
the force of gravity. These near or super-Eddington outer envelopes represent a
long standing challenge for calculating the evolution of massive stars in one
dimension, a situation that limits our understanding of the stellar progenitors
of some of the most exciting and energetic explosions in the universe. In
particular, the proximity to the Eddington limit has been the suspected cause
for the variability, large mass loss rate and giant eruptions of an enigmatic
class of massive stars: the luminous blue variables (LBVs). When in quiescence,
LBVs are usually found on the hot (Teff≈2−4×104 K) S Dor
instability strip. While in outburst, most LBVs stay on the cold S Dor
instability strip with a Teff≈9000 K. Here we show that physically
realistic three dimensional global radiation hydrodynamic simulations of
radiation dominated massive stars with the largest supercomputers in the world
naturally reproduce many observed properties of LBVs, specifically their
location in the Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram and their episodic mass loss
with rates of 10−7−10−5M⊙/yr. The helium opacity peak is found
to play an important role to determine these properties, which is not realized
in the traditional one dimensional models of massive stars. The simulations
also predict that convection causes irregular envelope oscillations and 10-30%
brightness variations on a typical timescale of a few days. The variability is
more prominent in our models that are on the cool part of the S Dor
instability. These calculations pave the way to a quantitative understanding of
the structure, stability and the dominant mode of mass loss of massive stars.Comment: This is the authors' original version. The paper is published in the
September 27th issue of Nature: https://rdcu.be/7Pg