Progenitors of supernova Ibc: a single Wolf-Rayet star as the possible progenitor of the SN Ib iPTF13bvn
Jose H. Groh (Geneva Observatory, Switzerland), Cyril Georgy (Keele, University, UK), and Sylvia Ekstrom (Geneva Observatory, Switzerland)

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that a single Wolf-Rayet star with an initial mass of 31-35 solar masses is likely the progenitor of the Type Ib supernova iPTF13bvn, supporting the idea that massive stars can produce visible supernovae.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a single Wolf-Rayet star model can reproduce the observed properties of the supernova progenitor, providing new insights into the origins of Type Ib supernovae.
Findings
Progenitor likely a single Wolf-Rayet star with initial mass 31-35 Msun.
Progenitor's luminosity ~5.55 log(L/Lsun), temperature ~45000 K.
Estimated ejecta mass ~8 Msun, higher than typical for SN Ib.
Abstract
Core-collapse supernova (SN) explosions mark the end of the tumultuous life of massive stars. Determining the nature of their progenitors is a crucial step towards understanding the properties of SNe. Until recently, no progenitor has been directly detected for SN of type Ibc, which are believed to come from massive stars that lose their hydrogen envelope through stellar winds and from binary systems where the companion has stripped the H envelope from the primary. Here we analyze recently reported observations of iPTF13bvn, which could possibly be the first detection of a SN Ib progenitor based on pre-explosion images. Very interestingly, the recently published Geneva models of single stars can reproduce the observed photometry of the progenitor candidate and its mass-loss rate, confirming a recently proposed scenario. We find that a single WR star with initial mass in the range 31-35…
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