Supermassive dark stars powered by dark matter annihilation can collapse into quasi-stars whose envelopes expand and cool to match the observed properties of many JWST Little Red Dots while bypassing the restrictive conditions of nuclear-powered supermassive star formation.
year = 1964, month = aug, volume = 140, pages =
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
years
2026 3verdicts
UNVERDICTED 3representative citing papers
Pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars ejects discrete shells that form the compact dense gas cocoons observed in Little Red Dots.
Simulations show VMS in star clusters reach 10^3-10^4 solar masses with dimensionless spins >10 under bloated accretion conditions, potentially forming spinning IMBHs that produce GW bursts like GW190521.
citing papers explorer
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JWST's Little Red Dots as collapsed Supermassive Dark Stars
Supermassive dark stars powered by dark matter annihilation can collapse into quasi-stars whose envelopes expand and cool to match the observed properties of many JWST Little Red Dots while bypassing the restrictive conditions of nuclear-powered supermassive star formation.
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Pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars creates the compact shells of Little Red Dots
Pulsational mass loss from supermassive stars ejects discrete shells that form the compact dense gas cocoons observed in Little Red Dots.
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Mass and Spin Growth of Very Massive Stars in Star Clusters Potentially Associated with Little Red Dots
Simulations show VMS in star clusters reach 10^3-10^4 solar masses with dimensionless spins >10 under bloated accretion conditions, potentially forming spinning IMBHs that produce GW bursts like GW190521.