Spectroscopic and kinematic analyses of a warm survivor of a D6 supernova
Mark A. Hollands, Ken. J. Shen, Roberto Raddi, Boris T. Gaensicke, Evan B. Bauer, and Alberto Rebassa-Mansergas

TL;DR
This study analyzes a candidate hyper-runaway star, SDSSJ163712.21+363155.9, revealing its composition, origin, and kinematic properties, supporting its ejection from a double-detonation supernova in the Milky Way.
Contribution
It provides spectroscopic and kinematic evidence supporting SDSSJ1637+3631 as a survivor of a D6 supernova, a novel identification of such a star.
Findings
Star has a temperature of 15680 K and a carbon+oxygen atmosphere.
Ejection velocity estimated at approximately 1870 km/s.
Origin localized to the inner Galactic disc, about 4.5 million years ago.
Abstract
SDSSJ163712.21+363155.9 is a candidate hyper-runaway star, first identified from its unusual spectrum in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which exhibits oxygen, magnesium, and silicon lines redshifted by several km/s, leading to the suggestion it was ejected from a thermonuclear supernova. We have acquired GTC OSIRIS spectroscopy of SDSSJ1637+3631 establishing a warm (K) carbon+oxygen dominated atmosphere, that is also abundant in the intermediate mass elements silicon, sulphur, and calcium. We interpret SDSSJ1637+3631 as the donor to an accreting white dwarf that exploded in a dynamically-driven double-degenerate double-detonation (D6) type Ia supernova, where the current composition is consistent with a CO white dwarf core, enriched with intermediate mass elements from deposited supernova ejecta. While SDSSJ1637+3631 has a low-precision Gaia parallax,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
