Type Ib/c supernovae in binary systems I. Evolution and properties of the progenitor stars
Sung-Chul Yoon, Stan E. Woosley, Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of Type Ib/c supernova progenitors in binary systems, considering rotation and mass loss, revealing diverse final structures and implications for supernova observations.
Contribution
It introduces new binary evolution models including rotation effects and detailed mass loss, providing insights into progenitor structures and supernova spectral features.
Findings
Progenitors can have final masses up to 7 Msun with varying helium envelopes.
Presence of thin hydrogen layers in many SN Ib progenitors.
Bimodal distribution of initial and final masses for SN Ic progenitors.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of Type Ib/c supernova (SN Ib/c) progenitors in close binary systems, using new evolutionary models that include the effects of rotation, with initial masses of 12 - 25 Msun for the primary components, and of single helium stars with initial masses of 2.8 - 20 Msun. We find that, despite the impact of tidal interaction on the rotation of primary stars, the amount of angular momentum retained in the core at the presupernova stage in different binary model sequences converge to a value similar to those found in previous single star models. This amount is large enough to produce millisecond pulsars, but too small to produce magnetars or long gamma-ray bursts. We employ the most up-to-date estimate for the Wolf-Rayet mass loss rate, and its implications for SN Ib/c progenitors are discussed in detail. In terms of stellar structure, SN Ib/c progenitors in binary…
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