Millicharged particles weaken pulsational pair-instability in massive stars, shifting the lower edge of the black hole mass gap upward and turning gravitational wave observations into a probe for particles with masses 35-200 keV and charges 10^{-10} to 10^{-9}.
Takahashi,The Low Detection Rate of Pair Instability Supernovae and the Effect of the Core Carbon Fraction,Astrophys
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The pair instability supernova (PISN) is a common fate of very massive stars (VMSs). Current theory predicts the initial and the CO core mass ranges for PISNe of $\sim$140-260 $M_\odot$ and $\sim$65-120 $M_\odot$ respectively for stars that are not much affected by the wind mass loss. The corresponding relative event rate between PISNe and core collapse supernovae is estimated to be $\sim$1% for the present-day initial mass function. However, no confident PISN candidate has been detected so far, despite more than 1,000 supernovae are discovered every recent years. We investigate the evolution of VMSs with various core carbon-to-oxygen ratios for the first time, by introducing a multiplication factor $f_{\rm cag} \in [ 0.1, 1.2 ]$ to the $^{12}$C($\alpha, \gamma$)$^{16}$O reaction rate. We find that a less massive VMS with a high $X$(C)/$X$(O) develops shell convection during the core carbon-burning phase, with which the star avoids the pair-creation instability. The second result is the high explodability for a massive VMS, i.e., a star with high $X$(C)/$X$(O) explodes with a smaller explosion energy. Consequently, the initial and the CO core mass ranges for PISNe are significantly increased. Finally, a PISN with high $X$(C)/$X$(O) yields smaller amount of $^{56}$Ni. Therefore, PISNe with high $X$(C)/$X$(O) are much rarer and fainter to be detected. This result advances the first theory to decrease the PISN event rate by directly shifting the CO core mass range.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 2roles
background 2polarities
background 2representative citing papers
Simulations show a 40-50 solar-mass black-hole cutoff is not guaranteed to be confidently recovered from GWTC-4-like catalogs, spurious detections are unlikely, and O4 data would reduce cutoff-mass uncertainty by at least 20 percent while yielding only a lower bound on the carbon-alpha reaction rate
citing papers explorer
-
The Black Hole Mass Gap as a New Probe of Millicharged Particles
Millicharged particles weaken pulsational pair-instability in massive stars, shifting the lower edge of the black hole mass gap upward and turning gravitational wave observations into a probe for particles with masses 35-200 keV and charges 10^{-10} to 10^{-9}.
-
Measurement prospects for the pair-instability mass cutoff with gravitational waves
Simulations show a 40-50 solar-mass black-hole cutoff is not guaranteed to be confidently recovered from GWTC-4-like catalogs, spurious detections are unlikely, and O4 data would reduce cutoff-mass uncertainty by at least 20 percent while yielding only a lower bound on the carbon-alpha reaction rate