Abstract

Massive stars are key sources of radiative, kinetic, and chemical feedback in the universe. Grids of massive star models computed by different groups each using their own codes, input physics choices and numerical approximations, however, lead to inconsistent results for the same stars. We use three of these 1D codes---GENEC, KEPLER and MESA---to compute non-rotating stellar models of $15~\mathrm{M}_\odot$, $20~\mathrm{M}_\odot$, and $25~\mathrm{M}_\odot$ and compare their nucleosynthesis. We follow the evolution from the main sequence until the end of core helium burning. The GENEC and KEPLER models hold physics assumptions used in large grids of published models. The MESA code was set up to use convective core overshooting such that the CO core masses are consistent with those obtained by GENEC. For all models, full nucleosynthesis is computed using the NuGrid post-processing tool MPPNP. We find that the surface abundances predicted by the models are in reasonable agreement. In the helium core, the standard deviation of the elemental overproduction factors for Fe to Mo is less than $30\,\%$---smaller than the impact of the present nuclear physics uncertainties. For our three initial masses, the three stellar evolution codes yield consistent results. Differences in key properties of the models, e.g., helium and CO core masses and the time spent as a red supergiant, are traced back to the treatment of convection and, to a lesser extent, mass loss. The mixing processes in stars remain the key uncertainty in stellar modelling. Better constrained prescriptions are thus necessary to improve the predictive power of stellar evolution models.

Highlights

  • Over the last few decades, several groups have calculated and published large grids of models across the massivestar mass range and spanning several initial metallicities

  • We have compared the structural evolution of stellar models from the GENEC, KEPLER and MESA stellar evolution codes

  • The models were analysed from the zero-age main sequence to the end of the core heliumburning stage

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last few decades, several groups have calculated and published large grids of models across the massivestar mass range and spanning several initial metallicities Such grids of models have proved invaluable for those wishing to simulate, for example, core-collapse supernovae (e.g., O’Connor & Ott 2011; Muller, Janka & Marek 2012; Ugliano et al 2012; Couch & Ott 2013; Nakamura et al 2014), galactic chemical evolution (e.g., Chiappini, Matteucci & Gratton 1997; Kawata & Gibson 2003; Cescutti & Chiappini 2014), or population synthesis (e.g., Bruzual & Charlot 2003; Eldridge & Stanway 2009). We focus on the main massive star range studied, between 15 M and 25 M

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