Progenitors of low-luminosity Type II-Plateau supernovae

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY(2018)

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摘要
The progenitors of low-luminosity Type II-Plateau supernovae (SNe II-P) are believed to be red supergiant (RSG) stars, but there is much disparity in the literature concerning their mass at core collapse and therefore on the main sequence. Here, we model the SN radiation arising from the low-energy explosion of RSG stars of 12, 25 and 27M(circle dot) on the main sequence and formed through single star evolution. Despite the narrow range in ejecta kinetic energy (2.5-4.2 x 10(50) erg) in our model set, the SN observables from our three models are significantly distinct, reflecting the differences in progenitor structure (e.g. surface radius, H-rich envelope mass and He-core mass). Our higher mass RSG stars give rise to Type II SNe that tend to have bluer colours at early times, a shorter photospheric phase, and a faster declining V-band light curve (LC) more typical of Type II-linear SNe, in conflict with the LC plateau observed for low-luminosity SNe II. The complete fallback of the CO core in the low-energy explosions of our high-mass RSG stars prevents the ejection of any Ni-56 (nor any core O or Si), in contrast to low-luminosity SNe II-P, which eject at least 0.001M(circle dot) of Ni-56. In contrast to observations, Type II SN models from higher mass RSGs tend to show an H alpha absorption that remains broad at late times (due to a larger velocity at the base of the H-rich envelope). In agreement with the analyses of pre-explosion photometry, we conclude that low-luminosity SNe II-P likely arise from low-mass rather than high-mass RSG stars.
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supernovae: general,supernovae: individual: 1994N, 1997D, 1999br, 1999eu, 1999gn, 2001dc, 2002gd, 2003Z, 2004eg, 2005cs, 2006ov, 2008bk, 2008in, 2009N, 2009md, 2010id, 2013am, 1999em
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