Rotating supermassive Pop III stars on the main sequence
Journal article, 2025

The detection of billion-solar-mass supermassive black holes (SMBHs) within the first billion years of cosmic history challenges conventional theories of black hole formation and growth. Simultaneously, recent JWST observations revealing exceptionally high nitrogen-to-oxygen abundance ratios in galaxies at high redshifts raise critical questions about rapid chemical enrichment mechanisms operating in the early universe. Supermassive stars (SMSs) with masses of 1000–10 000 M⊙ are promising candidates to explain these phenomena, but existing models have so far neglected the pivotal role of stellar rotation. Here we present the first comprehensive evolutionary models of rotating Pop III SMSs computed using the GENEC stellar evolution code, including detailed treatments of rotation-induced chemical mixing, angular momentum transport, and mass loss driven by the ΩΓ limit. We demonstrate that rotation significantly enlarges the convective core and extends stellar lifetimes by up to 20%, with moderate enhancement of mass-loss rates as stars approach critical rotation thresholds. Our results further indicate that the cores of SMSs rotate relatively slowly (below ∼200 km s−1), resulting in dimensionless spin parameters a * < 0.1 for intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) remnants that are notably lower than theoretical maximum spins. These findings highlight rotation as a key factor in determining the structural evolution, chemical yields, and black hole spin properties of SMSs, and provide critical insights into the observational signatures from the high-redshift universe and their interpretation.

stars: winds

stars: massive

stars: rotation

stars: Population III

outflows

stars: evolution

supergiants

Author

Devesh Nandal

University of Virginia

Gaël Buldgen

University of Liège

Daniel J. Whalen

University of Portsmouth

John Regan

Maynooth University

Tyrone E. Woods

University of Manitoba

Jonathan Tan

University of Virginia

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 701 A262

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Astronomy, Astrophysics, and Cosmology

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/202555878

More information

Latest update

10/2/2025