Subaru high-resolution spectroscopy of Star G in the Tycho supernova remnant
W.E. Kerzendorf, B.P. Schmidt, M. Asplund, K. Nomoto, Ph., Podsiadlowski, A. Frebel, R.A. Fesen, D. Yong

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectroscopy to analyze Star G in the Tycho supernova remnant, aiming to determine if it is the supernova's donor star by measuring its velocity, rotation, and proper motion.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed spectroscopic measurements of Star G, offering evidence that challenges its candidacy as the supernova donor star based on its velocity, rotation, and proper motion.
Findings
Star G's radial velocity is consistent with non-association.
Star G's rotation is below the expected threshold for a donor star.
Proper motion measurements do not conclusively link Star G to the supernova remnant.
Abstract
It is widely believed that Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) originate in binary systems where a white dwarf accretes material from a companion star until its mass approaches the Chandrasekhar mass and carbon is ignited in the white dwarf's core. This scenario predicts that the donor star should survive the supernova explosion, providing an opportunity to understand the progenitors of Type Ia supernovae.In this paper we argue that rotation is a generic signature expected of most non-giant donor stars that is easily measurable. \citep{2004Natur.431.1069R} examined stars in the center of the remnant of SN 1572 (Tycho's SN) and showed evidence that a subgiant star (Star G by their naming convention) near the remnant's centre was the system's donor star. We present high-resolution (R \simeq 40000) spectra taken with the High Dispersion Spectrograph on Subaru of this candidate donor star and…
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