Supernovae Ib and Ic from the explosion of helium stars
Luc Dessart, Sung-Chul Yoon, David R. Aguilera-Dena, and Norbert, Langer

TL;DR
This study models helium star explosions to explain the origins of Type Ib and Ic supernovae, showing how binary interactions and stellar winds influence their spectral differences and diversity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, self-consistent modeling framework linking helium star evolution, explosion parameters, and supernova spectra, clarifying the origin of SNe Ib and Ic.
Findings
Helium stars in binaries can produce both SNe Ib and Ic spectra.
Stellar wind mass loss effectively removes helium, leading to SN Ic progenitors.
Parameter variations reproduce the diversity observed in SNe Ibc.
Abstract
Much difficulty has so far prevented the emergence of a consistent scenario for the origin of Type Ib and Ic supernovae (SNe). Here, we follow a heuristic approach by examining the fate of helium stars in the mass range 4 to 12Msun, which presumably form in interacting binaries. The helium stars are evolved using stellar wind mass loss rates that agree with observations, and which reproduce the observed luminosity range of galactic WR stars, leading to stellar masses at core collapse in the range 3-5.5Msun. We then explode these models adopting an explosion energy proportional to the ejecta mass, roughly consistent with theoretical predictions. We impose a fixed 56Ni mass and strong mixing. The SN radiation from 3 to 100d is computed self-consistently starting from the input stellar models using the time-dependent non-local thermodynamic equilibrium radiative-transfer code CMFGEN. By…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
