Interacting supernovae from wide massive binary systems
Andrea Ercolino, Harim Jin, Norbert Langer, Luc Dessart

TL;DR
This paper uses detailed binary evolution models to explore how massive star binaries can produce diverse supernovae with varying circumstellar material, explaining many observed interacting supernova features.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive set of binary evolution simulations showing how different envelope stripping scenarios lead to diverse supernova interactions and CSM configurations.
Findings
Many models show incomplete envelope stripping leading to diverse CSM densities.
Core collapse during Roche lobe overflow can cause significant pre-SN variability.
Common envelope ejections shortly before collapse can produce the strongest supernova interactions.
Abstract
Many supernovae (SNe) imply an interaction of the SN ejecta with matter (CSM) surrounding the progenitor star. This suggests that many massive stars may undergo various degrees of envelope stripping shortly before exploding, and produce a considerable diversity in their pre-explosion CSM properties. We explore a generic set of ~100 detailed massive binary evolution models to characterize the amount of envelope stripping and the expected CSM configurations. Our binary models were computed with the MESA stellar evolution code, considering an initial primary star mass of 12.6 Msun, and focus on initial orbital periods above 500 d. We compute these models up to the time of the primary's iron core collapse. We find that Roche lobe overflow often leads to incomplete stripping of the mass donor, resulting in a large variety of pre-SN envelope masses. Many of our models' red supergiant (RSG)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
