Supernova 2007bi as a pair-instability explosion
A. Gal-Yam (Weizmann), P. Mazzali (MPA, Pisa, INAF/Padova), E. O. Ofek, (Caltech), P. E. Nugent (LBL), S. R. Kulkarni, M. M. Kasliwal, R. M. Quimby, (Caltech), A. V. Filippenko, S. B. Cenko, R. Chornock (UCB), R. Waldman, (HUJI), D. Kasen (UCSC), M. Sullivan (Oxford)

TL;DR
The paper reports the discovery of supernova 2007bi, a luminous event consistent with a pair-instability supernova from an extremely massive star, providing evidence for such phenomena in the local universe.
Contribution
First observational evidence of a pair-instability supernova in the nearby universe, confirming theoretical predictions about massive star explosions.
Findings
SN 2007bi's properties match PISN models
Radioactive 56Ni mass >3 M_solar
Core mass estimated at ~100 M_solar
Abstract
Stars with initial masses 10 M_{solar} < M_{initial} < 100 M_{solar} fuse progressively heavier elements in their centres, up to inert iron. The core then gravitationally collapses to a neutron star or a black hole, leading to an explosion -- an iron-core-collapse supernova (SN). In contrast, extremely massive stars (M_{initial} > 140 M_{solar}), if such exist, have oxygen cores which exceed M_{core} = 50 M_{solar}. There, high temperatures are reached at relatively low densities. Conversion of energetic, pressure-supporting photons into electron-positron pairs occurs prior to oxygen ignition, and leads to a violent contraction that triggers a catastrophic nuclear explosion. Tremendous energies (>~ 10^{52} erg) are released, completely unbinding the star in a pair-instability SN (PISN), with no compact remnant. Transitional objects with 100 M_{solar} < M_{initial} < 140 M_{solar}, which…
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