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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The Explosion of Helium Stars Evolved With Mass Loss

TLDR
In this paper, light curves, explosion energies, and remnant masses for a grid of supernovae resulting from massive helium stars that have been evolved including mass loss are calculated for a set of stars in interacting systems.
Abstract
Light curves, explosion energies, and remnant masses are calculated for a grid of supernovae resulting from massive helium stars that have been evolved including mass loss. These presupernova stars should approximate the results of binary evolution for stars in interacting systems that lose their envelopes close to the time of helium core ignition. Initial helium star masses are in the range 2.5 to 40\,\Msun, which correspond to main sequence masses of about 13 to 90\,\Msun. Common Type Ib and Ic supernovae result from stars whose final masses are approximately 2.5 to 5.6\,\Msun. For heavier stars, a large fraction of collapses lead to black holes, though there is an island of explodability for presupernova masses near 10\,\Msun. The median neutron star mass in binaries is 1.35--1.38\,\Msun \ and the median black hole mass is between 9 and 11\,\Msun. Even though black holes less massive than 5 \Msun\ are rare, they are predicted down to the maximum neutron star mass. There is no empty ``gap'', only a less populated mass range. For standard assumptions regarding the explosions and nucleosynthesis, the models predict light curves that are fainter than the brighter common Type Ib and Ic supernovae. Even with a very liberal, but physically plausible increase in $^{56}$Ni production, the highest energy models are fainter, at peak, than 10$^{42.6}$\,erg\,s$^{-1}$, and very few approach that limit. The median peak luminosity ranges from 10$^{42.0}$ to 10$^{42.3}$\,erg\,s$^{-1}$. Possible alternatives to the standard neutrino-powered and radioactive-illuminated models are explored. Magnetars are a promising alternative. Several other unusual varieties of Type I supernovae at both high and low mass are explored.

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Journal ArticleDOI

GW190425: Observation of a Compact Binary Coalescence with Total Mass ∼ 3.4 M O

B. P. Abbott, +1274 more
TL;DR: In 2019, the LIGO Livingston detector observed a compact binary coalescence with signal-to-noise ratio 12.9 and the Virgo detector was also taking data that did not contribute to detection due to a low SINR but were used for subsequent parameter estimation as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Origin of the heaviest elements: The rapid neutron-capture process

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an answer to the question "How Were the Elements from Iron to Uranium Made?" (Abridged) by combining new results and important breakthroughs in the related nuclear, atomic and astronomical fields of science.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is there a supernova bound on axions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a critical assessment of the SN1987A supernova cooling bound on axions and other light particles, showing that neutrinos do not cool the disk and do not affect its neutrino output.
Journal ArticleDOI

Core-collapse supernova explosion theory.

TL;DR: The delayed neutrino-heating mechanism is emerging as the key driver of supernova explosions, but there remain many issues to address, such as the chaos of the involved dynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the Lower Mass Gap and Unequal Mass Regime in Compact Binary Evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation of GW190814-like systems through isolated binary evolution across a suite of assumptions encapsulating many physical uncertainties in massive-star binary evolution is examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Luminosity function and stellar evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the evolutionary significance of the observed luminosity function for main-sequence stars in the solar neighborhood is discussed and it is shown that stars move off the main sequence after burning about 10 per cent of their hydrogen mass and that stars have been created at a uniform rate in a solar neighborhood for the last five billion years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solar System Abundances and Condensation Temperatures of the Elements

TL;DR: In this article, solar photospheric and meteoritic CI chondrite abundance determinations for all elements are summarized and the best currently available photosphere abundances are selected, including the meteoritic and solar abundances of a few elements (e.g., noble gases, beryllium, boron, phosphorous, sulfur).
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution and explosion of massive stars

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the current understanding of the lives and deaths of massive stars, with special attention to the relevant nuclear and stellar physics, and focused on their post-helium-burning evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Binary Interaction Dominates the Evolution of Massive Stars

TL;DR: More than 70% of all massive stars will exchange mass with a companion, leading to a binary merger in one-third of the cases, greatly exceed previous estimates and imply that binary interaction dominates the evolution of massive stars, with implications for populations ofmassive stars and their supernovae.
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