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Ultraviolet Detection of the Binary Companion to the Type IIb SN 2001ig

Abstract

We present HST/WFC3 ultraviolet imaging in the F275W and F336W bands of the Type IIb SN 2001ig at an age of more than 14 years. A clear point source is detected at the site of the explosion having mF275W=25.39±0.10m_{\rm F275W}=25.39 \pm 0.10 and mF336W=25.88±0.13m_{\rm F336W}=25.88 \pm 0.13 mag. Despite weak constraints on both the distance to the host galaxy NGC 7424 and the line-of-sight reddening to the supernova, this source matches the characteristics of an early B-type main sequence star having 19,000<Teff<22,00019,000 < T_{\rm eff} < 22,000 K and log(Lbol/L)=3.92±0.14\log (L_{\rm bol}/L_{\odot})=3.92 \pm 0.14. A BPASS v2.1 binary evolution model, with primary and secondary masses of 13 M_{\odot} and 9 M_{\odot} respectively, is found to resemble simultaneously in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram both the observed location of this surviving companion, and the primary star evolutionary endpoints for other Type IIb supernovae. This same model exhibits highly variable late-stage mass loss, as expected from the behavior of the radio light curves. A Gemini/GMOS optical spectrum at an age of 6 years reveals a narrow He II emission line, indicative of continuing interaction with a dense circumstellar medium at large radii from the progenitor. We review our findings on SN 2001ig in the context of binary evolution channels for stripped-envelope supernovae. Owing to the uncrowded nature of its environment in the ultraviolet, this study of SN 2001ig represents one of the cleanest detections to date of a surviving binary companion to a Type IIb supernova.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Resubmitted to ApJ after minor changes requested by refere

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    Last time updated on 07/05/2019