4.4 Article

No hot and luminous progenitor for Tycho's supernova

Journal

NATURE ASTRONOMY
Volume 1, Issue 11, Pages 800-804

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41550-017-0263-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA ADAP [NNX15AM03G S01, NSF/AST-1412980]
  2. Russian Scientific Foundation (RNF) project [14-22-00271]
  3. [HST-GO-12545.08]
  4. [HST-GO-14359.011]
  5. Russian Science Foundation [17-22-00023] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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Type la supernovae have proven vital to our understanding of cosmology, both as standard candles and for their role in galactic chemical evolution; however, their origin remains uncertain. The canonical accretion model implies a hot and luminous progenitor that would ionize the surrounding gas out to a radius of -10-100 pc for-100,000 years after the explosion. Here, we report stringent upper limits on the temperature and luminosity of the progenitor of Tycho's supernova (SN 1572), determined using the remnant itself as a probe of its environment. Hot, luminous progenitors that would have produced a greater hydrogen ionization fraction than that measured at the radius of the present remnant (-3 pc) can thus be excluded. This conclusively rules out steadily nuclear-burning white dwarfs (supersoft X-ray sources), as well as disk emission from a Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarf accreting approximately greater than 10(-8)M(circle dot)yr(-1) (recurrent novae; M-circle dot is equal to one solar mass). The lack of a surrounding Stromgren sphere is consistent with the merger of a double white dwarf binary, although other more exotic scenarios may be possible.

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