The Supernova Channel of Super-AGB Stars
A.J.T. Poelarends, F. Herwig, N. Langer, A. Heger

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of super-AGB stars, identifying the initial mass range leading to electron-capture supernovae and quantifying their contribution to supernovae in the universe.
Contribution
The study introduces a synthetic stellar evolution model to analyze super-AGB stars, accounting for thermal pulses and uncertainties in stellar processes, to predict supernova outcomes.
Findings
Electron-capture supernovae occur for initial masses 9.0-9.25 solar masses.
ECSNe constitute about 4% of all supernovae in the local universe.
Uncertainties in dredge-up and mass loss rates can increase ECSNe contribution up to 20%.
Abstract
We study the late evolution of solar metallicity stars in the transition region between white dwarf formation and core collapse. This includes the super-asymptotic giant branch (super-AGB, SAGB) stars, which have massive enough cores to ignite carbon burning and form an oxygen-neon (ONe) core. The most massive SAGB stars have cores that may grow to the Chandrasekhar mass because of continued shell-burning. Their cores collapse, triggering a so called electron capture supernovae (ECSN). From stellar evolution models we find that the initial mass range for SAGB evolution is 7.5 ... 9.25\msun. We perform calculations with three different stellar evolution codes to investigate the sensitivity of this mass range to some of the uncertainties in current stellar models. The mass range significantly depends on the treatment of semiconvective mixing and convective overshooting. To consider the…
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