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Multi-Wavelength Observations of Supernova 2011ei: Time-Dependent Classification of Type IIb and Ib Supernovae and Implications for their Progenitors

Authors :
Milisavljevic, D.
Margutti, R.
Soderberg, A. M.
Pignata, G.
Chomiuk, L.
Fesen, R.
Bufano, F.
Sanders, N. E.
Parrent, J. T.
Parker, S.
Mazzali, P.
Pian, E.
Pickering, T.
Buckley, D.
Crawford, S.
Gulbis, A. A. M.
Hettlage, C.
Hooper, E.
Nordsieck, K.
O'Donoghue, D.
Husser, T. -O.
Potter, S.
Kniazev, A.
Kotze, P.
Romero-Colmenero, E.
Vaisanen, P.
Wolf, M.
Bietenholz, M.
Bartel, N.
Fransson, C.
Walker, E. S.
Brunthaler, A.
Chakraborti, S.
Levesque, E. M.
MacFadyen, A.
Drescher, C.
Bock, G.
Marples, P.
Anderson, J. P.
Benetti, S.
Reichart, D.
Ivarsen, K.
Publication Year :
2012

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 the timescale of one week. High-cadence monitoring of this transition suggests that absorption attributable to a high velocity (> 12,000 km/s) H-rich shell is not rare in Type Ib events. Radio observations imply a shock velocity of v = 0.13c and a progenitor star mass-loss rate of 1.4 x 10^{-5} Msun yr^{-1} (assuming wind velocity v_w=10^3 km/s). 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 lower-mass (3-4 Msun), compact (R* <= 1x10^{11} 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 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.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1207.2152
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/767/1/71