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Submit a new article| On the evolution and fate of super-massive stars Context: We study the evolution and fate of solar compositionsuper-massive stars in the mass range 60-1000 Mȯ. Ourstudy is relevant for very massive objects observed in young stellarcomplexes as well as for super-massive stars that could potentially formthrough runaway stellar collisions.  Aims: We predict the outcomes ofstellar evolution by employing a mass-loss prescription that isconsistent with the observed Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram location of themost massive stars.  Methods: We compute a series of stellar models withan appropriately modified version of the Eggleton evolutionary code. Results: We find that super-massive stars with initial masses up to 1000Mȯ end their lives as objects less massive than≃150 Mȯ. These objects are expected to collapseinto black holes (with M ⪉ 70 ~Mȯ) or explode aspair-instability supernovae.  Conclusions: We argue that ifultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) contain intermediate-mass blackholes, these are unlikely to be the result of runaway stellar collisionsin the cores of young clusters.
 
 
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| Constellation: | とけい座 |  | Right ascension: | 02h24m20.71s |  | Declination: | -64°54'16.3" |  | Apparent magnitude: | 9.644 |  | Proper motion RA: | 2 |  | Proper motion Dec: | -4.3 |  | B-T magnitude: | 10.28 |  | V-T magnitude: | 9.697 |  Catalogs and designations:
 
 
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