The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2025)

Physics-driven Explosions of Stripped High-mass Stars: Synthetic Light Curves and Spectra of Stripped-envelope Supernovae with Broad Light Curves

  • Jing Lu,
  • Brandon L. Barker,
  • Jared Goldberg,
  • Wolfgang E. Kerzendorf,
  • Maryam Modjaz,
  • Sean M. Couch,
  • Joshua V. Shields,
  • Andrew G. Fullard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ada26d
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 979, no. 2
p. 148

Abstract

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Stripped-envelope supernovae (SESNe) represent a significant fraction of core-collapse supernovae, arising from massive stars that have shed their hydrogen and, in some cases, helium envelopes. The origins and explosion mechanisms of SESNe remain a topic of active investigation. In this work, we employ radiative-transfer simulations to model the light curves and spectra of a set of explosions of single, solar-metallicity, massive Wolf–Rayet stars with ejecta masses ranging from 4 to 11 M _⊙ , which were computed from a turbulence-aided and neutrino-driven explosion mechanism. We analyze these synthetic observables to explore the impact of varying ejecta mass and helium content on observable features. We find that the light curve shape of these progenitors with high ejecta masses is consistent with observed SESNe with broad light curves but not the peak luminosities. The commonly used analytic formula based on rising bolometric light curves overestimates the ejecta mass of these high-initial-mass progenitor explosions by a factor of up to 2.6. In contrast, the calibrated method by Haynie et al., which relies on late-time decay tails, reduces uncertainties to an average of 20% within the calibrated ejecta mass range. Spectroscopically, the He i 1.083 μ m line remains prominent even in models with as little as 0.02 M _⊙ of helium. However, the strength of the optical He i lines is not directly proportional to the helium mass but instead depends on a complex interplay of factors such as the ^56 Ni distribution, composition, and radiation field. Thus, producing realistic helium features requires detailed radiative transfer simulations for each new hydrodynamic model.

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