The origin of the long-lived radioactive 26Al, which has been observed in the
Galactic interstellar medium from its 1.809 MeV decay gamma-ray line emission,
has been a persistent problem for over twenty years. Wolf-Rayet (WR) winds were
thought to be the most promising source, but their calculated 26Al yields are
not consistent with recent analyses of the 1.809 MeV emission from the nearest
WR star and nearby OB associations. The expected 26Al yield from the WR star
exceeds by as much as a factor of 3, that set by the 2-sigma upper limit on the
1.809 MeV emission, while the WR yields in the OB associations are only about
1/3 of that required by the 1.809 MeV emission. We suggest that a solution to
these problems may lie in 26Al from a previously ignored source: explosive
nucleosynthesis in the core collapse SNIb/c supernovae of WR stars that have
lost most of their mass to close binary companions. Recent nucleosynthetic
calculations of SNIb/c suggest that their 26Al yields depend very strongly on
the final, pre-supernova mass of the WR star, and that those with final masses
around 6 to 8 solar masses are expected to produce as much as 0.01 solar masses
of 26Al per supernova. Such binary SNIb/c make up only a small fraction of the
current SNIb/c and only about 1% of all Galactic core collapse supernovae. They
appear to be such prolific sources that the bulk of the present 26Al in the
Galaxy may come from just a few hundred close binary SNIb/c and the intense
1.809 MeV emission from nearby OB associations may come from just one or two
such supernova.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters, 611,10
August 200