Progenitor mass constraints for core-collapse supernovae from correlations with host galaxy star formation
J. P. Anderson, S. M. Habergham, P. A. James, M. Hamuy

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy star formation indicators to analyze the association of various supernova types with star-forming regions, revealing a progenitor mass sequence and challenging assumptions about the origins of certain supernovae.
Contribution
It provides new empirical evidence linking supernova types to progenitor masses based on their spatial correlation with star formation regions.
Findings
SNIc have the strongest association with star-forming regions, indicating more massive progenitors.
SNIIP and SNIIn trace recent star formation but not ongoing, suggesting lower mass progenitors.
Results support a progenitor mass sequence: Ia-II-Ib-Ic, with implications for supernova progenitor models.
Abstract
Using H-alpha emission as a tracer of on-going (<16 Myr old) and near-UV emission as a tracer of recent (16-100 Myr old) star formation (SF), we present constraints on core-collapse (CC) supernova (SN) progenitors through their association with SF regions. We present statistics of a large sample of SNe; 163.5 type II (58 IIP, 13 IIL, 13.5 IIb, 19 IIn and 12 'impostors') and 96.5 type Ib/c (39.5 Ib and 52 Ic). Using pixel statistics our main findings and conclusions are: 1) An increasing progenitor mass sequence is observed, implied from an increasing association of SNe to host galaxy H-alpha emission. This commences with the type Ia (SNIa) showing the weakest association, followed by the SNII, then the SNIb, with the SNIc showing the strongest correlation to SF regions. Thus our progenitor mass sequence runs Ia-II-Ib-Ic. 2) Overall SNIbc are found to occur nearer to bright HII regions…
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