MULTI-WAVELENGTH OBSERVATIONS OF SUPERNOVA 2011ei: TIME-DEPENDENT CLASSIFICATION OF TYPE IIb AND Ib SUPERNOVAE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THEIR PROGENITORS
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
2013-04Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Vljevic, Dan Milisa
Cómo citar
MULTI-WAVELENGTH OBSERVATIONS OF SUPERNOVA 2011ei: TIME-DEPENDENT CLASSIFICATION OF TYPE IIb AND Ib SUPERNOVAE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THEIR PROGENITORS
Author
- Vljevic, Dan Milisa;
- Margutti, Raffaella;
- Soderberg, Alicia;
- Pignata Libralato, Giuliano;
- Chomiuk, Laura;
- Fesen, Robert A.;
- Bufano, Filomena;
- Sanders, Nathan E.;
- Parrent, Jerod T.;
- Parker, Stuart;
- Mazzali, Paolo;
- Pian, Elena;
- Pickering, Timothy;
- Buckley, David A.;
- Crawford, Steven M.;
- Gulbis, Amanda A.;
- Hettlage, Christian;
- Hooper, Eric;
- Nordsieck, Kenneth H.;
- O’Donoghue, Darragh;
- Husser, Tim Oliver;
- Potter, Stephen;
- Kniazev, Alexei;
- Kotze, Paul;
- Romero Colmenero, Encarni;
- Vaisanen, Petri;
- Wolf, Marsha;
- Bietenholz, Michael F.;
- Bartel, Norbert;
- Fransson, Claes;
- Walker, Emma S.;
- Brunthaler, Andreas;
- Chakraborti, Sayan;
- Levesque, Emily M.;
- MacFadyen, Andrew;
- Drescher, Colin;
- Bock, Greg;
- Marples, Peter;
- Anderson, Joseph P.;
- Benetti, Stefano;
- Reichart, Daniel;
- Ivarsen, Kevin;
Abstract
We present X-ray, UV/optical, and radio observations of the stripped-envelope, core-collapse supernova (SN)
2011ei, one of the least luminous SNe IIb or Ib observed to date. Our observations begin with a discovery within
∼1 day of explosion and span several months afterward. Early optical spectra exhibit broad, Type II-like hydrogen
Balmer profiles that subside rapidly and are replaced by Type Ib-like He-rich features on a timescale of one week.
High-cadence monitoring of this transition suggests absorption attributable to a high-velocity ( 12,000 km s−1)
H-rich shell, which is likely present in many Type Ib events. Radio observations imply a shock velocity of
v ≈ 0.13 c and a progenitor star average mass-loss rate of M˙ ≈ 1.4 × 10−5 M yr−1 (assuming wind velocity
vw = 103 km s−1). This is consistent with independent constraints from deep X-ray observations with Swift-XRT
and Chandra. Overall, the multi-wavelength properties of SN 2011ei are consistent with the explosion of a lowermass
(3–4 M ), compact (R∗ 1 × 1011 cm), He-core star. The star retained a thin hydrogen envelope at the
time of explosion, and was embedded in an inhomogeneous circumstellar wind suggestive of modest episodic mass
loss. We conclude that SN 2011ei’s rapid spectral metamorphosis is indicative of time-dependent classifications
that bias estimates of the relative explosion rates for Type IIb and Ib objects, and that important information about
a progenitor star’s evolutionary state and mass loss immediately prior to SN explosion can be inferred from timely
multi-wavelength observations.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126407
DOI: doi:10.1088/0004-637X/767/1/71
Quote Item
The Astrophysical Journal, 767:71 (19pp), 2013
Collections