On the energy source of ultra-stripped supernovae

Abstract

Ultra-stripped supernovae (USSN) with a relatively low ejecta mass of 0.1M (e.g., iPTF14gqr and SN2019dge) are considered to originate from ultra-stripped carbon-oxygen (CO) cores in close binary systems and are likely to be progenitors of binary neutron stars (BNSs). Here we conduct long-term simulations of USSNe from ultra-stripped progenitors with various masses (1.45\,M ≤ MCO ≤ 2.0\,M) based on results of neutrino-radiation hydrodynamics simulations, and consistently calculate the nucleosynthesis and the SN light curves. We find that a USSN from a more massive progenitor has a larger ejecta mass but a smaller 56Ni mass mainly due to the fallback, which leads to the light curve being dimmer and slower. By comparing the synthetic light curves with the observed ones, we show that SN2019dge can be solely powered by 56Ni synthesized during the explosion of a progenitor with MCO 1.6\,M while iPTF14gqr cannot be explained by the 56Ni powered model; 0.05M of 56Ni inferred from the light curve fitting is argued to be difficult to synthesize for ultra-stripped progenitors. We consider fallback accretion onto and rotation-powered relativistic wind from the newborn NS as alternative energy sources and show that iPTF14gqr could be powered by a newborn NS with a magnetic field of Bp 1015\,G and an initial rotation period of Pi 0.1\,s.

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