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The Type Icn SN 2021csp: Implications for the Origins of the Fastest Supernovae and the Fates of Wolf-Rayet Stars

Authors :
Perley, Daniel A.
Sollerman, Jesper
Schulze, Steve
Yao, Yuhan
Fremling, Christoffer
Gal-Yam, Avishay
Ho, Anna Y. Q.
Yang, Yi
Kool, Erik C.
Irani, Ido
Yan, Lin
Andreoni, Igor
Baade, Dietrich
Bellm, Eric C.
Brink, Thomas G.
Chen, Ting-Wan
Cikota, Aleksandar
Coughlin, Michael W.
Dekany, Richard
Duev, Dmitry A.
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Hoeflich, Peter
Kasliwal, Mansi M.
Kulkarni, S. R.
Lunnan, Ragnhild
Masci, Frank J.
Maund, Justyn R.
Medford, Michael S.
Riddle, Reed
Rosnet, Philippe
Shupe, David L.
Strotjohann, Nora Linn
Tzanidakis, Anastasios
Zheng, WeiKang
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present observations of SN 2021csp, the second example of a newly-identified type of supernova (Type Icn) hallmarked by strong, narrow, P Cygni carbon features at early times. The SN appears as a fast and luminous blue transient at early times, reaching a peak absolute magnitude of -20 within 3 days due to strong interaction between fast SN ejecta (v ~ 30000 km/s) and a massive, dense, fast-moving C/O wind shed by the WC-like progenitor months before explosion. The narrow line features disappear from the spectrum 10-20 days after explosion and are replaced by a blue continuum dominated by broad Fe features, reminiscent of Type Ibn and IIn supernovae and indicative of weaker interaction with more extended H/He-poor material. The transient then abruptly fades ~60 days post-explosion when interaction ceases. Deep limits at later phases suggest minimal heavy-element nucleosynthesis, a low ejecta mass, or both, and imply an origin distinct from that of classical Type Ic supernovae. We place SN 2021csp in context with other fast-evolving interacting transients, and discuss various progenitor scenarios: an ultrastripped progenitor star, a pulsational pair-instability eruption, or a jet-driven fallback supernova from a Wolf-Rayet star. The fallback scenario would naturally explain the similarity between these events and radio-loud fast transients, and suggests a picture in which most stars massive enough to undergo a WR phase collapse directly to black holes at the end of their lives.<br />Comment: Accepted to ApJ 29th December 2021. Originally submitted to ApJ on 6th August 2021

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2111.12110
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac478e