Supernovae from stellar mergers and accretors of binary mass transfer: Implications for Type IIP, 1987A-like and interacting supernovae
F.R.N. Schneider, E. Laplace, Ph. Podsiadlowski

TL;DR
This study models supernovae resulting from binary star interactions, revealing correlations between explosion properties and progenitor characteristics, and classifying supernova types based on binary evolution scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces detailed models of hydrogen-rich Type II supernovae from binary mergers and accretors, linking explosion features to binary evolution and progenitor properties.
Findings
Correlations between explosion energy, nickel yield, and neutron star mass.
Progenitor properties predict supernova type and observable features.
Binary interactions can produce supernovae similar to observed Type IIP, 1987A-like, and interacting SNe.
Abstract
As most massive stars are born in binary and other multiple-star systems, many are expected to exchange mass with a companion star or merge with it during their lives. This means that most supernovae (SNe) are from such binary products. Here, we focus on hydrogen-rich Type II SNe from accretors of binary mass transfer and stellar mergers. We compute various SN properties such as the explosion energies, nickel yields, and neutron star (NS) kick velocities, but also consider NS masses. We find tight correlations between these parameters and, e.g., the central specific entropy and core compactness. However, there is no obvious relation between these explosion properties and the evolutionary history of the pre-SN stars. We find linear relations between the nickel mass and the SN explosion energy and the NS remnant mass. We further group our models into progenitors of SNe IIP, SN 1987A-like…
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