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The interaction of core-collapse supernova ejecta with a companion star

Authors :
Liu, Zheng-Wei
Tauris, Thomas M.
Roepke, Friedrich K.
Moriya, Takashi J.
Kruckow, Matthias
Stancliffe, Richard J.
Izzard, Robert G.
Source :
A&A 584, A11 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The progenitors of many CCSNe are expected to be in binary systems. After the SN explosion, the companion may suffer from mass stripping and be shock heated as a result of the impact of the SN ejecta. If the binary system is disrupted, the companion is ejected as a runaway and hypervelocity star. By performing a series of 3D hydrodynamical simulations of the collision of SN ejecta with the companion star, we investigate how CCSN explosions affect their companions. We use the BEC code to construct the detailed companion structure at the time of SN explosion. The impact of the SN blast wave on the companion is followed by means of 3D SPH simulations using the Stellar GADGET code. For main-sequence (MS) companions, we find that the amount of removed mass, impact velocity, and chemical contamination of the companion that results from the impact of the SN ejecta, strongly increases with decreasing binary separation and increasing explosion energy. Their relationship can be approximately fitted by power laws, which is consistent with the results obtained from impact simulations of SNe~Ia. However, we find that the impact velocity is sensitive to the momentum profile of the outer SN ejecta and, in fact, may decrease with increasing ejecta mass, depending on the modeling of the ejecta. Because most companions to Ib/c CCSNe are in their MS phase at the moment of the explosion, combined with the strongly decaying impact effects with increasing binary separation, we argue that the majority of these SNe lead to inefficient mass stripping and shock heating of the companion star following the impact of the ejecta. Our simulations show that the impact effects of Ib/c SN ejecta on the structure of MS companions, and thus their long-term post-explosion evolution, is in general not dramatic. We find that at most 10% of their mass is lost, and their resulting impact velocities are less than 100 km/s.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, some minor typographical errors are fixed, the affiliation of second author is corrected

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 584, A11 (2015)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1509.03633
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201526757