C
Couerl":46ssi7xf said:Thanks for clarifying, 40 solar masses perhaps is the suggested minimum for a BH then.
crazyeddie":2crb9jtt said:Couerl":2crb9jtt said:Thanks for clarifying, 40 solar masses perhaps is the suggested minimum for a BH then.
I don't think that's right. I've always read that the minimum stellar mass remnant in order for an object to become a black hole is only 1.5 times that of the sun.
Couerl":31a300yg said:Right, right.. I misspoke again. What I'm actually curious about is the mass limit any given star can posess/achieve before gravity overtakes fusion and causes an immediate collapse. A situation where a super massive star forms, fusion begins and then gravity simply snuffs it back out from the get go to form a BH.
Astronomers have long theorized that as a protostar grows to a size beyond 120 solar masses, something drastic must happen. Although the limit can be stretched for very early Population III stars, if any stars existed above 120 solar mass, they would challenge current theories of stellar evolution.
The limit on mass arises because stars of greater mass have a higher rate of core energy generation, which is higher far out of proportion to their greater mass. For a sufficiently massive star, the outward pressure of radiant energy generated by nuclear fusion in the star’s core exceeds the inward pull of its own gravity. This is called the Eddington limit. Beyond this limit, a star ought to push itself apart, or at least shed enough mass to reduce its internal energy generation to a lower, maintainable rate. In theory, a more massive star could not hold itself together, because of the mass loss resulting from the outflow of stellar material.