4.7 Article

SN 2009md: another faint supernova from a low-mass progenitor

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 417, Issue 2, Pages 1417-1433

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19370.x

Keywords

stars: evolution; stars: massive; supernovae: general; supernovae: individual: SN 2009md; galaxies: individual: NGC 3389

Funding

  1. Northern Ireland Department of Employment and Learning
  2. Swedish Natural Science Research Council
  3. Progetto Di Ricerca Di Interesse Nazionale-Istituto Nazionale Di Astrofisica (PRIN-INAF)
  4. Danish National Research Foundation
  5. Israeli Science Foundation
  6. Marie Curie IRG
  7. Peter and Patricia Gruber Awards
  8. Weizmann-Minerva program
  9. Benoziyo Center for Astrophysics
  10. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  11. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council
  12. MPIA
  13. German Israeli Science Foundation for Research and Development
  14. Israel Science Foundation
  15. Canadian Space Agency
  16. NASA Office of Space Science [NNX09AF08G]
  17. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/G00269X/1, ST/G009465/1, ST/I001123/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  18. STFC [ST/G009465/1, ST/G00269X/1, ST/I001123/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We present adaptive optics imaging of the core-collapse supernova (SN) 2009md, which we use together with archival Hubble Space Telescope data to identify a coincident progenitor candidate. We find the progenitor to have an absolute magnitude of V=-4.63+0.3-0.4 mag and a colour of V-I= 2.29+0.25-0.39 mag, corresponding to a progenitor luminosity of log L/L?similar to 4.54 +/- 0.19 dex. Using the stellar evolution code STARS, we find this to be consistent with a red supergiant progenitor with M= 8.5+6.5-1.5 M?. The photometric and spectroscopic evolution of SN 2009md is similar to that of the class of sub-luminous Type IIP SNe; in this paper we compare the evolution of SN 2009md primarily to that of the sub-luminous SN 2005cs. We estimate the mass of 56Ni ejected in the explosion to be (5.4 +/- 1.3) x 10-3 M? from the luminosity on the radioactive tail, which is in agreement with the low 56Ni masses estimated for other sub-luminous Type IIP SNe. From the light curve and spectra, we show the SN explosion had a lower energy and ejecta mass than the normal Type IIP SN 1999em. We discuss problems with stellar evolutionary models, and the discrepancy between low observed progenitor luminosities (log L/L?similar to 4.35 dex) and model luminosities after the second dredge-up for stars in this mass range, and consider an enhanced carbon burning rate as a possible solution. In conclusion, SN 2009md is a faint SN arising from the collapse of a progenitor close to the lower mass limit for core collapse. This is now the third discovery of a low-mass progenitor star producing a low-energy explosion and low 56Ni ejected mass, which indicates that such events arise from the lowest end of the mass range that produces a core-collapse SN (78 M?).

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