Connecting the Light Curves of Type IIP Supernovae to the Properties of their Progenitors
Brandon L. Barker, Chelsea E. Harris, MacKenzie L. Warren, Evan P., O'Connor, Sean M. Couch

TL;DR
This paper links supernova light curves to progenitor core properties, demonstrating that optical observations can estimate core mass, thus providing insights into massive star evolution through combined simulations and observations.
Contribution
It introduces a method to infer progenitor core masses from supernova light curves using simulations and observational data, advancing understanding of supernova progenitors.
Findings
Simulated plateau luminosities match observed distributions.
A linear correlation exists between iron core mass and plateau luminosity.
Optical photometry can estimate progenitor core mass with ~0.05 solar mass accuracy.
Abstract
Observations of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) reveal a wealth of information about the dynamics of the supernova ejecta and its composition but very little direct information about the progenitor. Constraining properties of the progenitor and the explosion requires coupling the observations with a theoretical model of the explosion. Here, we begin with the CCSN simulations of Couch et al 2020 ApJ 890 127, which use a non-parametric treatment of the neutrino transport while also accounting for turbulence and convection. In this work we use the SuperNova Explosion Code to evolve the CCSN hydrodynamics to later times and compute bolometric light curves. Focusing on SNe IIP, we then (1) directly compare the theoretical STIR explosions to observations and (2) assess how properties of the progenitor's core can be estimated from optical photometry in the plateau phase alone. First, the…
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