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No Surviving SN Ia Companion in SNR 0509-67.5: Stellar Population Characterization and Comparison to Models

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Buchner,  Johannes
High Energy Astrophysics, MPI for Extraterrestrial Physics, Max Planck Society;

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引用

Shields, J. V., Arunachalam, P., Kerzendorf, W., Hughes, J. P., Biriouk, S., Monk, H., & Buchner, J. (2023). No Surviving SN Ia Companion in SNR 0509-67.5: Stellar Population Characterization and Comparison to Models. Astrophysical Journal, Letters, 950(2):. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/acd6a0.


引用: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000E-4C69-8
要旨
The community agrees that Type Ia supernovae arise from carbon/oxygen white dwarfs undergoing thermonuclear runaway. However, the full progenitor system and the process that prompts the white dwarf to explode remain unknown. Most current models suggest that the white dwarf explodes because of interaction with a binary companion that may survive the process and remain within the resulting remnant of the exploded star. Furthermore, both the pre-supernova interaction process and the explosion of the primary are expected to imprint a significant departure from ordinary stellar radii and temperatures onto the secondary, making the star identifiable against the unrelated stellar population. Identification of a surviving companion inside an SN Ia remnant might confirm a specific corresponding SN Ia progenitor channel based on the identity of the companion. We conducted a surviving companion search of the Type Ia remnant SNR 0509−67.5 based in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The well-constrained distance to and foreground extinction of the Large Magellanic Cloud allow for Bayesian inference of stellar parameters with low correlation and uncertainties. We present a deep catalog of fully characterized stars interior to SNR 0509−67.5 with radii, effective temperatures, and metallicities inferred using combined Hubble Space Telescope photometric observations across multiple visits. We then compile a list of surviving companion models appropriate for the age of the remnant (roughly 400 yr after the explosion). We compare these predictions with the inferred stellar parameters and conclude that none of the stars are consistent with the predicted signatures of a surviving companion.