2022
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2210.08662
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Pulsations of primordial supermassive stars induced by a general relativistic instability; visible to JWST at z$>$12

Abstract: The origin of high-redshift quasars and their supermassive black hole engines is unclear. One promising solution is the collapse of a primordial supermassive star. Observational confirmation of this scenario may be difficult, but a general relativistic instability supernova provides one avenue for such. Previous studies have found that a general relativistic instability supernova has a potentially decades-long plateau phase visible to JWST at high redshift. In this work, we examine stars with mass just below t… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(3 citation statements)
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“…Besides the high luminosity and temperature at shock breakout, there is another difference between the lightcurves of the pr-GRSNe and the lightcurves of standard GRSNe (𝛼 process, Moriya et al 2021;Nagele et al 2022a). This is the longer duration of the plateau phase which follows hydrogen recombination, nearly an order of magnitude longer than our previous GRSN models.…”
Section: Lightcurvesmentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…Besides the high luminosity and temperature at shock breakout, there is another difference between the lightcurves of the pr-GRSNe and the lightcurves of standard GRSNe (𝛼 process, Moriya et al 2021;Nagele et al 2022a). This is the longer duration of the plateau phase which follows hydrogen recombination, nearly an order of magnitude longer than our previous GRSN models.…”
Section: Lightcurvesmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…The photosphere remains at the surface of the hylotrope for ten days as the shock propagates through the envelope, after which the photosphere expands and the effective temperature drops. From a peak value of 𝐿 bol = 6.86 × 10 46 [ergs/s], the luminosity then falls nearly monotonically (except for a slight increase at hydrogen recombination) in behavior reminiscent of the pulsations of large radius supermassive stars in Nagele et al (2022a). The luminosity of the hylotropic model falls at a slower rate than for the fiducial model, passing 𝐿 bol = 10 43 [ergs/s] only after 9.95 years in the rest frame.…”
Section: With Hylotropic Envelopementioning
confidence: 97%
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