Investigating the properties of stripped-envelope supernovae; what are the implications for their progenitors?
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2019-02-15
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en
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Resumen
We present observations and analysis of 18 stripped-envelope supernovae observed during
2013–2018. This sample consists of five H/He-rich SNe, six H-poor/He-rich SNe, three narrow
lined SNe Ic, and four broad lined SNe Ic. The peak luminosity and characteristic time-scales
of the bolometric light curves are calculated, and the light curves modelled to derive 56Ni and
ejecta masses (MNi and Mej). Additionally, the temperature evolution and spectral line velocity
curves of each SN are examined. Analysis of the [O I] line in the nebular phase of eight SNe
suggests their progenitors had initial masses <20 M . The bolometric light curve properties
are examined in combination with those of other SE events from the literature. The resulting
data set gives the Mej distribution for 80 SE–SNe, the largest such sample in the literature to
date, and shows that SNe Ib have the lowest median Mej, followed by narrow-lined SNe Ic,
H/He-rich SNe, broad-lined SNe Ic, and finally gamma-ray burst SNe. SNe Ic-6/7 show the
largest spread of Mej ranging from ∼1.2–11 M , considerably greater than any other subtype.
For all SE–SNe <Mej> = 2.8 ± 1.5 M which further strengthens the evidence that SE–SNe
arise from low-mass progenitors which are typically <5 M at the time of explosion, again
suggesting MZAMS <25 M . The low <Mej> and lack of clear bimodality in the distribution
implies <30 M progenitors and that envelope stripping via binary interaction is the dominant
evolutionary pathway of these SNe.
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Indexación Scopus
Palabras clave
Supernovae: general
Citación
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Volume 485, Issue 2, Pages 1559 - 1578 15 February 2019
DOI
10.1093/mnras/sty3399