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Nebular phase properties of supernova Ibc from He-star explosions

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Janka,  H.-T.
Stellar Astrophysics, MPI for Astrophysics, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Dessart, L., Hillier, D. J., Sukhbold, T., Woosley, S. E., & Janka, H.-T. (2021). Nebular phase properties of supernova Ibc from He-star explosions. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 656: A61. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202141927.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0009-CC2A-3
Abstract
Following our recent work on Type II supernovae (SNe), we present a set of 1D nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium radiative transfer calculations for nebular-phase Type Ibc SNe starting from state-of-the-art explosion models with detailed nucleosynthesis. Our grid of progenitor models is derived from He stars that were subsequently evolved under the influence of wind mass loss. These He stars, which most likely form through binary mass exchange, synthesize less oxygen than their single-star counterparts with the same zero-age main sequence (ZAMS) mass. This reduction is greater in He-star models evolved with an enhanced mass loss rate. We obtain a wide range of spectral properties at 200 d. In models from He stars with an initial mass > 6 M, the [O I] λλ 6300,  6364 is of a comparable or greater strength than [Ca II] λλ 7291,  7323 – the strength of [O I] λλ 6300,  6364 increases with the He-star initial mass. In contrast, models from lower mass He stars exhibit a weak [O I] λλ 6300,  6364, strong [Ca II] λλ 7291,  7323, and also strong N II lines and Fe II emission below 5500 Å. The ejecta density, which is modulated by the ejecta mass, the explosion energy, and clumping, has a critical impact on gas ionization, line cooling, and spectral properties. We note that Fe II dominates the emission below 5500 Å and is stronger at earlier nebular epochs. It ebbs as the SN ages, while the fractional flux in [O I] λλ 6300,  6364 and [Ca II] λλ 7291,  7323 increases with a similar rate as the ejecta recombine. Although the results depend on the adopted wind mass loss rate and pre-SN mass, we find that He-stars of 6–8 M initially (ZAMS mass of 23–28 M) match the properties of standard SNe Ibc adequately. This finding agrees with the offset in progenitor masses inferred from the environments of SNe Ibc relative to SNe II. Our results for less massive He stars are more perplexing since the predicted spectra are not seen in nature. They may be missed by current surveys or associated with Type Ibn SNe in which interaction power dominates over decay power.