Constraints on the Massive Supernova Progenitors

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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11 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in IJMPD

Scientific paper

10.1142/S0218271807010699

Generally accepted scheme distinguishes two main classes of supernovae (SNe): Ia resulting from the old stellar population (deflagration of a white dwarf in close binary systems), and SNe of type II and Ib/c whose ancestors are young massive stars (died in a core-collapse explosion). Concerning the latter, there are suggestions that the SNe II are connected to early B stars, and SNe Ib/c to isolated O or Wolf-Rayet (W-R) stars. However, little or no effort was made to further separate SNe Ib from Ic. We have used assumed SN rates for different SN types in spiral galaxies in an attempt to perform this task. If isolated progenitor hypothesis is correct, our analysis indicates that SNe Ib result from stars of main-sequence mass $23 \mathcal{M}_{\odot} \lesssim \mathcal{M} \lesssim 30 \mathcal{M}_{\odot}$, while the progenitors of SNe Ic are more massive stars with $\mathcal{M} \gtrsim 30 \mathcal{M}_{\odot}$. Alternatively, if the majority of SNe Ib/c appear in close binary systems (CBs) then they would result from the same progenitor population as most of the SNe II, i.e. early B stars with initial masses of order $\mathcal{M} \sim 10 \mathcal{M}_{\odot}$. Future observations of SNe at high-redshift ($z$) and their rate will provide us with unique information on SN progenitors and star-formation history of galaxies. At higher-$z$ (deeper in the cosmic past) we expect to see the lack of type Ia events, i.e. the dominance of core-collapse SNe. Better understanding of the stripped-envelope SNe (Ib/c), and their potential use as distance indicators at high-$z$, would therefore be of great practical importance.

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