The Progenitor Mass of SN 2011dh from Stellar Populations Analysis
Jeremiah W. Murphy (1), Zachary G. Jennings (1), Benjamin Williams, (1), Julianne J. Dalcanton (1), Andrew E. Dolphin (2), ((1) Department of, Astronomy, University of Washington, (2) Raytheon)

TL;DR
This study uses stellar population analysis from HST data to estimate the progenitor mass of SN 2011dh, suggesting a most probable initial mass around 13 solar masses, with implications for progenitor identification.
Contribution
It introduces a method to infer supernova progenitor masses by analyzing nearby stellar populations, accounting for multiple star formation episodes and their probabilities.
Findings
Most probable progenitor mass is 13^{+2}_{-1} M_{Sun}.
Two distinct star formation episodes identified at 6 and 17 Myrs.
Progenitor mass estimates are robust against uncertain late-stage stellar evolution.
Abstract
Using Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry, we characterize the age of the stellar association in the vicinity of supernova (SN) 2011dh and use it to infer the zero-age main sequence mass (M_{ZAMS}) of the progenitor star. We find two distinct and significant star formation events with ages of <6 and 17^{+3}_{-4} Myrs, and the corresponding M_{ZAMS} are >29 and 13^{+2}_{-1} M_{Sun}, respectively. These two bursts represent 18^{+4}_{-9}% (young) and 64^{+10}_{-14}% (old) of the total star formation in the last 50 Myrs. Adopting these fractions as probabilities suggests that the most probable M_{ZAMS} is 13^{+2}_{-1} M_{Sun}. These results are most sensitive to the luminosity function along the well-understood main sequence and are less sensitive to uncertain late-stage stellar evolution. Therefore, they stand even if the progenitor suffered disruptive post-main-sequence evolution…
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