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A cosmic formation site of silicon and sulphur revealed by a new type of supernova explosion

Authors :
Schulze, Steve
Gal-Yam, Avishay
Dessart, Luc
Miller, Adam A.
Woosley, Stan E.
Yang, Yi
Bulla, Mattia
Yaron, Ofer
Sollerman, Jesper
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Hinds, K-Ryan
Perley, Daniel A.
Tsuna, Daichi
Lunnan, Ragnhild
Sarin, Nikhil
Brennan, Sean J.
Brink, Thomas G.
Bruch, Rachel J.
Chen, Ping
Das, Kaustav K.
Dhawan, Suhail
Fransson, Claes
Fremling, Christoffer
Gangopadhyay, Anjasha
Irani, Ido
Jerkstrand, Anders
Knezevic, Nikola
Kushnir, Doron
Maeda, Keiichi
Maguire, Kate
Ofek, Eran
Omand, Conor M. B.
Qin, Yu-Jing
Sharma, Yashvi
Sit, Tawny
Srinivasaragavan, Gokul P.
Strothjohann, Nora L.
Takei, Yuki
Waxman, Eli
Yan, Lin
Yao, Yuhan
Zheng, WeiKang
Zimmerman, Erez A.
Bellm, Eric C.
Coughlin, Michael W.
Masci, Frank. J.
Purdum, Josiah
Rigault, Mickael
Wold, Avery
Kulkarni, Shrinivas R.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The cores of stars are the cosmic furnaces where light elements are fused into heavier nuclei. The fusion of hydrogen to helium initially powers all stars. The ashes of the fusion reactions are then predicted to serve as fuel in a series of stages, eventually transforming massive stars into a structure of concentric shells. These are composed of natal hydrogen on the outside, and consecutively heavier compositions inside, predicted to be dominated by helium, carbon/oxygen, oxygen/neon/magnesium, and oxygen/silicon/sulphur. Silicon and sulphur are fused into inert iron, leading to the collapse of the core and either a supernova explosion or the direct formation of a black hole. Stripped stars, where the outer hydrogen layer has been removed and the internal He-rich layer (in Wolf-Rayet WN stars) or even the C/O layer below it (in Wolf-Rayet WC/WO stars) are exposed, provide evidence for this shell structure, and the cosmic element production mechanism it reflects. The types of supernova explosions that arise from stripped stars embedded in shells of circumstellar material (most notably Type Ibn supernovae from stars with outer He layers, and Type Icn supernovae from stars with outer C/O layers) confirm this scenario. However, direct evidence for the most interior shells, which are responsible for the production of elements heavier than oxygen, is lacking. Here, we report the discovery of the first-of-its-kind supernova arising from a star peculiarly stripped all the way to the silicon and sulphur-rich internal layer. Whereas the concentric shell structure of massive stars is not under debate, it is the first time that such a thick, massive silicon and sulphur-rich shell, expelled by the progenitor shortly before the SN explosion, has been directly revealed.<br />Comment: 48 pages, 12 figures and 10 tables. Submitted to a high-impact journal. The reduced spectra and photometry will be made available via the journal webpage and the WISeREP archive after the acceptance of the paper

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2409.02054
Document Type :
Working Paper