http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.14290
Calcium-rich supernovae (Ca-rich SNe) are faint, rapidly evolving transients whose progenitor system is yet to be determined. We derive the $\gamma$-ray deposition histories of five Ca-rich SNe from the literature in order to place constraints on possible progenitor systems. We find that the $ \gamma $-ray escape time, $ t_0 $, of the Ca-rich SNe sample is $\approx35$-$65 \,\rm{d}$, within the unoccupied region between Type Ia SNe and stripped envelope supernovae (SESNe). The $ t_0$-$M_\mathrm{Ni56} $ distribution of these SNe, where $M_\mathrm{Ni56}$ is the synthesised $^{56}$Ni mass in the explosion, creates a continuum between the Type Ia and SESNe $ t_0$-$M_\mathrm{Ni56} $ distribution, hinting at a possible connection between all the events. By comparing our results to models from the literature, we were able to determine that helium shell detonation models and core-collapse models of ultra-stripped stars are unlikely to explain Ca-rich SNe, since the gamma-ray escape time in these models is smaller than the observed values. Models that agree with the observed $ t_0$-$M_\mathrm{Ni56} $ distribution are explosions of low mass, $M\approx0.75$-$0.8\,M_\odot $, white dwarfs and core-collapse models of stripped stars with an ejecta mass of $M\approx1$-$3\,M_{\odot}$.
A. Sharon and D. Kushnir
Mon, 2 Jan 23
42/44
Comments: 12 pages, submitted to MNRAS
You must be logged in to post a comment.