Abstract

Abstract We model explosions driven by the coalescence of a black hole or neutron star with the core of its massive-star companion. Upon entering a common-envelope phase, a compact object may spiral all the way to the core. The concurrent release of energy is likely to be deposited into the surrounding common envelope, powering a merger-driven explosion. We use hydrodynamic models of binary coalescence to model the common-envelope density distribution at the time of coalescence. We find toroidal profiles of material, concentrated in the binary’s equatorial plane and extending to many times the massive star’s original radius. We use the spherically averaged properties of this circumstellar material (CSM) to estimate the emergent light curves that result from the interaction between the blast wave and the CSM. We find that typical merger-driven explosions are brightened by up to three magnitudes by CSM interaction. From population synthesis models, we discover that the brightest merger-driven explosions, M V ∼ −18 to −20, are those involving black holes because they have the most massive and extended CSM. Black hole coalescence events are also common; they represent about 50% of all merger-driven explosions and approximately 0.25% of the core-collapse rate. Merger-driven explosions offer a window into the highly uncertain physics of common-envelope interactions in binary systems by probing the properties of systems that merge rather than eject their envelopes.

Highlights

  • Binary and multiple systems are ubiquitous among massive stars

  • In the case of massive stars interacting with lower-mass, compact object companions, the theoretical expectation is that only donor stars with the most-extended, weakly bound hydrogen envelopes are susceptible to ejection, while the remainder of systems are likely to merge (Kruckow et al 2016)

  • We have presented models for mergerdriven explosions that arise from the plunge of a compact object within the helium core of its giant star companion following a common envelope phase (Chevalier 2012)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Common envelope interactions can lead to either the ejection of the shared, gaseous envelope and a surviving, binary pair or to the merger of the donor star core with the companion. One of the key points that Chevalier (2012) and Soker et al (2019) mention is that the distribution of common envelope ejecta is crucial in shaping the observed light curve (see Kleiser et al 2018, for a similar discussion in the context of rapidly-fading supernovae).

MERGER-DRIVEN EXPLOSIONS
Model Adopted
CIRCUMSTELLAR MATERIAL EXPELLED DURING BINARY COALESCENCE
Hydrodynamic Models of Binary Coalescence
Unstable Mass Transfer Leading to Binary Merger
Resultant Circumstellar Distribution
Thin Shell of CSM
Continuous Distributions of CSM
Interpretation
Imprint of CSM
Implications of Varying Energetics and Donor Star Properties
POPULATION SYNTHESIS OF MERGER-DRIVEN EXPLOSIONS
Population Model
Compact Object-Core Mergers
Event Rate
Outburst Population
DISCUSSION
Comparison to Observed Supernovae
14 SN1998s
Identification in Optical Surveys
Findings
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
VALIDATION OF LIGHT CURVE CALCULATIONS
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