[JWM2012] BW-66 , the SIMBAD biblio

2012ApJ...761...26J - Astrophys. J., 761, 26 (2012/December-2)

Supernova remnant progenitor masses in M31.

JENNINGS Z.G., WILLIAMS B.F., MURPHY J.W., DALCANTON J.J., GILBERT K.M., DOLPHIN A.E., FOUESNEAU M. and WEISZ D.R.

Abstract (from CDS):

Using Hubble Space Telescope photometry, we age-date 59 supernova remnants (SNRs) in the spiral galaxy M31 and use these ages to estimate zero-age main-sequence masses (MZAMS) for their progenitors. To accomplish this, we create color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) and employ CMD fitting to measure the recent star formation history of the regions surrounding cataloged SNR sites. We identify any young coeval population that likely produced the progenitor star, then assign an age and uncertainty to that population. Application of stellar evolution models allows us to infer the MZAMS from this age. Because our technique is not contingent on identification or precise location of the progenitor star, it can be applied to the location of any known SNRs. We identify significant young star formation around 53 of the 59 SNRs and assign progenitor masses to these, representing a factor of ∼2 increase over currently measured progenitor masses. We consider the remaining six SNRs as either probable Type Ia candidates or the result of core-collapse progenitors that have escaped their birth sites. In general, the distribution of recovered progenitor masses is bottom-heavy, showing a paucity of the most massive stars. If we assume a single power-law distribution, dN/dM∝M α, then we find a distribution that is steeper than a Salpeter initial mass function (IMF) (α = -2.35). In particular, we find values of α outside the range -2.7 ≥ α ≥ -4.4 to be inconsistent with our measured distribution at 95% confidence. If instead we assume a distribution that follows a Salpeter IMF up to some maximum mass, then we find that values of MMax> 26 are inconsistent with the measured distribution at 95% confidence. In either scenario, the data suggest that some fraction of massive stars may not explode. The result is preliminary and requires more SNRs and further analysis. In addition, we use our distribution to estimate a minimum mass for core collapse between 7.0 and 7.8 M.

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Journal keyword(s): galaxies: individual: M31 - supernovae: general

Nomenclature: Table 1: [JWM2012] BW-NNN N=27 among (Nos 11-110).

Simbad objects: 67

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