Binary progenitor models of type IIb supernovae
J.S.W. Claeys, S.E. de Mink, O.R. Pols, J.J. Eldridge, M. Baes

TL;DR
This study models binary star systems to understand the progenitors of type IIb supernovae, revealing the importance of binary interactions and accretion efficiency in matching observed supernova rates.
Contribution
It provides an extensive grid of binary evolution models for type IIb supernova progenitors, highlighting the impact of mass transfer assumptions on predicted supernova rates.
Findings
Predicted supernova rate is about 6 times lower than observed with standard models.
Most secondary stars appear as hot O stars at explosion.
Efficient accretion by companions is rare but necessary to match observed rates.
Abstract
Massive stars that lose their hydrogen-rich envelope down to a few tenths of a solar mass explode as extended type IIb supernovae, an intriguing subtype that links the hydrogen-rich type II supernovae with the hydrogen-poor type Ib and Ic. The progenitors may be very massive single stars that lose their envelope due to their stellar wind, but mass stripping due to interaction with a companion star in a binary system is currently considered to be the dominant formation channel. We computed an extensive grid of binary models with the Eggleton binary evolution code. The predicted rate from our standard models, which assume conservative mass transfer, is about 6 times smaller than the current rate indicated by observations. It is larger but still comparable to the rate expected from single stars. To recover the observed rate we must generously allow for uncertainties and low accretion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
