SIMBAD references

2014ApJ...785...95M - Astrophys. J., 785, 95 (2014/April-3)

Long-lasting X-ray emission from Type IIb supernova 2011dh and mass-loss history of the yellow supergiant progenitor.

MAEDA K., KATSUDA S., BAMBA A., TERADA Y. and FUKAZAWA Y.

Abstract (from CDS):

Type IIb supernova (SN) 2011dh, with conclusive detection of an unprecedented yellow supergiant (YSG) progenitor, provides an excellent opportunity to deepen our understanding on the massive star evolution in the final centuries toward the SN explosion. In this paper, we report on detection and analyses of thermal X-ray emission from SN IIb 2011dh at ∼500 days after the explosion on Chandra archival data, providing a solidly derived mass-loss rate of a YSG progenitor for the first time. We find that the circumstellar media should be dense, more than that expected from a Wolf-Rayet (W-R) star by one order of magnitude. The emission is powered by a reverse shock penetrating into an outer envelope, fully consistent with the YSG progenitor but not with a W-R progenitor. The density distribution at the outermost ejecta is much steeper than that expected from a compact W-R star, and this finding must be taken into account in modeling the early UV/optical emission from SNe IIb. The derived mass-loss rate is ∼3 x 10–6 M/yr for the mass-loss velocity of ∼20 km/s in the final ∼1300 yr before the explosion. The derived mass-loss properties are largely consistent with the standard wind mass-loss expected for a giant star. This is not sufficient to be a main driver to expel nearly all the hydrogen envelope. Therefore, the binary interaction, with a huge mass transfer having taken place at ≳ 1300 yr before the explosion, is a likely scenario to produce the YSG progenitor.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): circumstellar matter - stars: mass-loss - supernovae: general - supernovae: individual: SN 2011dh

Simbad objects: 4

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