No surviving stellar companion for Cassiopeia A
Wolfgang E. Kerzendorf, Tuan Do, Selma E. de Mink, Ylva G\"otberg, Dan, Millisaljevic, Emmanouil Zapartas, Mathieu Renzo, Stephen Justham, Philipp, Podsiadlowski, Robert A. Fesen

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST data to search for a surviving stellar companion to Cassiopeia A, conclusively ruling out any such companion and challenging common supernova progenitor models.
Contribution
The paper provides the deepest upper limits to date on possible companions to Cas A, using proper motion and photometric data to exclude all plausible stellar companions.
Findings
No stellar companion detected at Cas A's explosion site.
Deep photometric limits exclude companions of any reasonable mass or age.
Findings challenge the most common evolutionary scenarios for type IIb supernovae.
Abstract
Massive stars in binaries can give rise to extreme phenomena such as X-ray binaries and gravitational wave sources after one or both stars end their lives as core-collapse supernovae. Stars in close orbit around a stellar or compact companion are expected to explode as "stripped-envelope supernovae", showing no (Type Ib/c) or little (Type IIb) signs of hydrogen in the spectra, because hydrogen-rich progenitors are too large to fit. The physical processes responsible for the stripping process and the fate of the companion are still very poorly understood. Aiming to find new clues, we investigate Cas~A, which is a very young (340 \,yr) and near (3.4\,kpc) remnant of a core collapse supernova. Cas~A has been subject to several searches for possible companions, all unsuccessfully. We present new measurements of the proper motions and photometry of stars in the vicinity based…
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