Autores
                Dr.
            
                        Selma de Mink
            
  Fecha y hora
                                    29 Feb 2012 - 23:00 Europe/London
                            Dirección
                                    Aula
Idioma de la charla
                                    Inglés
                            Número en la serie
                                    1
                            Descripción
                                    Although they are rare and short-lived, massive stars play a major  role in Universe. With their large luminosities, strong stellar winds  and spectacular explosions they act as cosmic engines, heating and  enriching their surroundings, where the next generation of stars are  forming. 
The latest stellar evolutionary models show that  rotation can have drastic effects, which has been suggested as a  evolutionary path for the progenitors of long gamma-ray bursts. I will  discuss the recent efforts of theorists and observers to understand the  effects of rotation including some highlights of the ongoing "VLT-FLAMES  Tarantula Survey of Massive Stars". A further challenge arises from the  preference of massive stars to come in close pairs. Interaction with a  companion leads to spectacular phenomena such as runaways, X-ray  binaries and stellar mergers. I will present new results on the true  close binary fraction for massive stars, which imply that only a  minority evolve undisturbed towards their death.