Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BinCosmos (The impact of Massive Binary Stars through Cosmic Times)
Berichtszeitraum: 2015-04-01 bis 2017-03-31
The widely-used models are outdated: they consider all massive stars to be single. In recent years, large observing campaigns with world-class telescopes provided quantitative evidence showing that the large majority of massive stars will interact with a close binary companion (e.g. Sana & de Mink et. al. Science 2012). This project investigates and quantifies how binarity affects several of the crucial roles that massive stars played throughout cosmic time. Although pioneering studies have been conducted, the exploration of these effects is still in its infancy. So far progress has been hampered by (I) the challenging nature of the computations, (II) the many uncertainties in the models and until recently (III) the lack of observational constraints. This project overcomes these challenges by combining the strengths of highly complementary state-of-the art computational tools and by making use of the recently available observational data sets.
In addition, results have been obtained on the core science of the project related to the impact of binary interaction, which are published in papers that are lead by PhD students that were directly supervised by the PI. Most notably are a study on how massive stars die as core collapse supernovae (Zapartas, de Mink et al. 2017) and the implications of binary interaction for the ionizing radiation (Gotberg, de Mink et al. 2017).