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Are stripped envelope supernovae really deficient in $^{56}$Ni?
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- arXiv, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Recent works have indicated that the $^{56}$Ni masses estimated for Stripped Envelope SNe (SESNe) are systematically higher than those estimated for SNe II. Although this may suggest a distinct progenitor structure between these types of SNe, the possibility remains that this may be caused by observational bias. One important possible bias is that SESNe with low $^{56}$Ni mass are dim, and therefore they are more likely to escape detection. By investigating the distributions of the $^{56}$Ni mass and distance for the samples collected from the literature, we find that the current literature SESN sample indeed suffers from a significant observational bias, i.e., objects with low $^{56}$Ni mass - if they exist - will be missed, especially at larger distances. Note, however, that those distant objects in our sample are mostly SNe Ic-BL. We also conducted mock observations assuming that the $^{56}$Ni mass distribution for SESNe is intrinsically the same with that for SNe II. We find that the $^{56}$Ni mass distribution of the detected SESNe samples moves toward higher mass than the assumed intrinsic distribution, because of the difficulty in detecting the low-$^{56}$Ni mass SESNe. These results could explain the general trend of the higher $^{56}$Ni mass distribution (than SNe II) of SESNe found thus far in the literature. However, further finding clear examples of low-$^{56}$Ni mass SESNe ($\leq 0.01M_{\odot}$) is required to add weight to this hypothesis. Also, the objects with high $^{56}$Ni mass ($\gtrsim 0.2 M_{\odot}$) are not explained by our model, which may require an additional explanation.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6a1acf84204f0ea54576318de0df6576
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2109.00603