On Monolithic Supermassive Stars

Abstract

Supermassive stars have been proposed as the progenitors of the massive (109M\sim 10^{9}\,\rm{M}_{\odot}) quasars observed at z7z\sim7. Prospects for directly detecting supermassive stars with next-generation facilities depend critically on their intrinsic lifetimes, as well as their formation rates. We use the 1D stellar evolution code Kepler to explore the theoretical limiting case of zero-metallicity, non-rotating stars, formed monolithically with initial masses between 10kM10\,\rm{kM}_{\odot} and 190kM190\,\rm{kM}_{\odot}. We find that stars born with masses between 60kM\sim60\,\rm{kM}_{\odot} and 150kM\sim150\,\rm{kM}_{\odot} collapse at the end of the main sequence, burning stably for 1.5Myr\sim1.5\,\rm{Myr}. More massive stars collapse directly through the general relativistic instability after only a thermal timescale of 3kyr\sim3\,\rm{kyr}--4kyr4\,\rm{kyr}. The expected difficulty in producing such massive, thermally-relaxed objects, together with recent results for currently preferred rapidly-accreting formation models, suggests that such ``truly direct'' or ``dark'' collapses may not be typical for supermassive objects in the early Universe. We close by discussing the evolution of supermassive stars in the broader context of massive primordial stellar evolution and the possibility of supermassive stellar explosions.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, MNRAS accepte

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