1. A potential progenitor for the Type Ic supernova 2017ein.
- Author
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Kilpatrick, Charles D, Takaro, Tyler, Foley, Ryan J, Leibler, Camille N, Pan, Yen-Chen, Campbell, Randall D, Jacobson-Galan, Wynn V, Lewis, Hilton A, Lyke, James E, and Max, Claire E
- Subjects
SUPERNOVAE ,SUPERGIANT stars ,CATACLYSMIC variable stars ,BINARY stars ,MILKY Way ,STELLAR evolution ,STAR formation - Abstract
We report the first detection of a credible progenitor system for a Type Ic supernova (SN Ic), SN 2017ein. We present spectra and photometry of the SN, finding it to be similar to carbon-rich, low-luminosity SNe Ic. Using a post-explosion Keck adaptive optics image, we precisely determine the position of SN 2017ein in pre-explosion HST images, finding a single source coincident with the SN position. This source is marginally extended, and is consistent with being a stellar cluster. However, under the assumption that the emission of this source is dominated by a single point source, we perform point-spread function photometry, and correcting for line-of-sight reddening, we find it to have M
F555W = −7.5 ± 0.2 mag and mF555W − mF814W =−0.67 ± 0.14 mag. This source is bluer than the main sequence and brighter than almost all Wolf–Rayet stars, however, it is similar to some WC+O− and B-star binary systems. Under the assumption that the source is dominated by a single star, we find that it had an initial mass of $$55^{+20}_{-15} \rm M_{\odot}$$. We also examined binary star models to look for systems that match the overall photometry of the pre-explosion source and found that the best-fitting model is an 80+48M⊙ close binary system in which the 80M⊙ star is stripped and explodes as a lower mass star. Late-time photometry after the SN has faded will be necessary to cleanly separate the progenitor star emission from the additional coincident emission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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