Investigating the properties of stripped-envelope supernovae, what are the implications for their progenitors?
Abstract
We present observations and analysis of 18 stripped-envelope supernovae observed during 2013 -- 2018. This sample consists of 5 H/He-rich SNe, 6 H-poor/He-rich SNe, 3 narrow lined SNe Ic and 4 broad lined SNe Ic. The peak luminosity and characteristic time-scales of the bolometric light curves are calculated, and the light curves modelled to derive 56Ni and ejecta masses (MNi and Mej). Additionally, the temperature evolution and spectral line velocity-curves of each SN are examined. Analysis of the [O I] line in the nebular phase of eight SNe suggests their progenitors had initial masses <20 Msun. The bolometric light curve properties are examined in combination with those of other SE events from the literature. The resulting dataset gives the Mej distribution for 80 SE-SNe, the largest such sample in the literature to date, and shows that SNe Ib have the lowest median Mej, followed by narrow lined SNe Ic, H/He-rich SNe, broad lined SNe Ic, and finally gamma-ray burst SNe. SNe Ic-6/7 show the largest spread of Mej, ranging from 1.2 - 11 Msun, considerably greater than any other subtype. For all SE-SNe <Mej>=2.81.5 Msun which further strengthens the evidence that SE-SNe arise from low mass progenitors which are typically <5 Msun at the time of explosion, again suggesting Mzams <25 Msun. The low <Mej> and lack of clear bimodality in the distribution implies <30 Msun progenitors and that envelope stripping via binary interaction is the dominant evolutionary pathway of these SNe.
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