Hypernovae and their Gamma-Ray Bursts Connection
Ken'ichi Nomoto, Masaomi Tanaka, Nozomu Tominaga, Keiichi Maeda, and, Paolo A. Mazzali

TL;DR
This paper explores the connection between hypernovae and gamma-ray bursts, proposing models for different progenitor star masses and their resulting explosions, and discusses the implications for stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking hypernovae and gamma-ray bursts to progenitor star mass and collapse outcomes, including neutron stars and black holes.
Findings
Hypernovae are associated with massive star collapse leading to black holes.
Weak GRBs or XRFs may originate from smaller progenitors forming neutron stars.
The nucleosynthesis in hypernovae links to metal-poor star compositions.
Abstract
The connection between long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) and Supernovae (SNe), have been established through the well observed cases of GRB980425/SN 1998bw, GRB030329/SN 2003dh and GRB031203/SN 2003lw. These events can be explained as the prompt collapse to a black hole (BH) of the core of a massive star (M ~ 40 Msun) that had lost its outer hydrogen and helium envelopes. All these SNe exhibited strong oxygen lines, and their energies were much larger than those of typical SNe, thus these SNe are called Hypernovae (HNe). The case of SN 2006aj/GRB060218 appears different: the GRB was weak and soft (an X-Ray Flash, XRF); the SN is dimmer and has very weak oxygen lines. The explosion energy of SN 2006aj was smaller, as was the ejected mass. In our model, the progenitor star had a smaller mass than other GRB/SNe (M ~ 20 Msun), suggesting that a neutron star (NS) rather than a black hole was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Satellite Systems and Control
