Type II supernovae progenitor and ejecta properties from the total emitted light, ET
Abstract
It was recently shown that the bolometric light curves of type II supernovae (SNe) allow an accurate and robust measurement of the product of the radiation energy in the ejecta, Er, and the time since the explosion, t, at early phases (t 10d) of the homologous expansion. This observable, denoted here ET Ert is constant during that time and depends only on the progenitor structure and explosion energy. We use a 1D hydrodynamic code to find ET of simulated explosions of 145 red supergiant progenitors obtained using the stellar evolution code MESA, and relate this observable to the properties of the progenitor and the explosion energy. We show that ET probes only the properties of the envelope (velocity, mass and initial structure), similarly to other observables that rely on the photospheric phase emission. Nevertheless, for explosions where the envelope dominates the ejected mass, Menv/Mej 0.6, ET is directly related to the explosion energy Eexp and ejected mass Mej through the relation ET ≈ 0.15 Eexp1/2 R* Mej1/2, where R* is the progenitor radius, to an accuracy better than 30\%. We also provide relations between ET and the envelope properties that are accurate (to within 20\%) for all the progenitors in our sample, including those that lost most of their envelope. We show that when the envelope velocity can be reasonably measured by line shifts in observed spectra, the envelope is directly constrained from the bolometric light curve (independent of Eexp). We use that to compare observations of 11 SNe with measured ET and envelope velocity to our sample of numerical progenitors. This comparison suggests that many SNe progenitors have radii that are 500~R. In the framework of our simulations this indicates, most likely, a rather high value of the mixing length parameter.
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