Core-collapse explosions of Wolf-Rayet stars and the connection to type IIb/Ib/Ic supernovae
Luc Dessart, D. John Hillier, Eli Livne, Sung-Chul Yoon, Stan Woosley,, Roni Waldman, and Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This study uses advanced radiative-transfer simulations to explore how Wolf-Rayet star explosions produce various supernova types, linking progenitor properties to observed spectral and light curve features, and highlighting the role of binary evolution and metallicity.
Contribution
It provides detailed models connecting Wolf-Rayet star explosions to supernova classifications, emphasizing binary evolution effects and metallicity influence on spectra.
Findings
Low ejecta mass models show early gamma-ray leakage.
Binary progenitors produce characteristic spectral features.
Metallicity significantly affects spectral signatures.
Abstract
We present non-LTE time-dependent radiative-transfer simulations of supernova (SN) IIb/Ib/Ic spectra and light curves, based on ~1B-energy piston-driven ejecta, with and without 56Ni, produced from single and binary Wolf-Rayet (W-R) stars evolved at solar and sub-solar metallicities. Our bolometric light curves show a 10-day long post-breakout plateau with a luminosity of 1-5x10^7Lsun. In our 56Ni-rich models, with ~3Msun ejecta masses, this plateau precedes a 20-30-day long re-brightening phase initiated by the outward-diffusing heat wave powered by radioactive decay at depth. In low ejecta-mass models with moderate mixing, Gamma-ray leakage starts as early as ~50d after explosion and causes the nebular luminosity to steeply decline by ~0.02mag/d. Such signatures, which are observed in standard SNe IIb/Ib/Ic, are consistent with low-mass progenitors derived from a binary-star…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
