The initial mass-remnant mass relation for core collapse supernovae
C. Ugolini, M.Limongi, R. Schneider, A. Chieffi, U. N. Di Carlo, M., Spera

TL;DR
This paper models the initial mass-remnant mass relation for core-collapse supernovae, revealing how progenitor properties influence black hole masses and providing formulas for population synthesis.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation framework for stellar remnants considering rotation, metallicity, and supernova physics, with new fitting formulas for remnant masses.
Findings
Black hole mass depends on progenitor rotation, metallicity, and supernova criteria.
Non-rotating, low-metallicity stars can produce black holes up to ~87 solar masses.
Enhanced wind mass loss limits black hole masses from rotating progenitors to ~41.6 solar masses.
Abstract
The first direct detection of gravitational waves in 2015 marked the beginning of a new era for the study of compact objects. Upcoming detectors, such as the Einstein Telescope, are expected to add thousands of binary coalescences to the list. However, from a theoretical perspective, our understanding of compact objects is hindered by many uncertainties, and a comprehensive study of the nature of stellar remnants from core-collapse supernovae is still lacking. In this work, we investigate the properties of stellar remnants using a homogeneous grid of rotating and non-rotating massive stars at various metallicities from Limongi and Chieffi 2018. We simulate the supernova explosion of the evolved progenitors using the HYdrodynamic Ppm Explosion with Radiation diffusION (HYPERION) code (Limongi and Chieffi 2020), assuming a thermal bomb model calibrated to match the main properties of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
