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The Prevalence and Influence of Circumstellar Material around Hydrogen-rich Supernova Progenitors

Authors :
Rachel J. Bruch
Avishay Gal-Yam
Ofer Yaron
Ping Chen
Nora L. Strotjohann
Ido Irani
Erez Zimmerman
Steve Schulze
Yi Yang
Young-Lo Kim
Mattia Bulla
Jesper Sollerman
Mickael Rigault
Eran Ofek
Maayane Soumagnac
Frank J. Masci
Christoffer Fremling
Daniel Perley
Jakob Nordin
S. Bradley Cenko
Anna Y. Q. Ho
S. Adams
Igor Adreoni
Eric C. Bellm
Nadia Blagorodnova
Kevin Burdge
Kishalay De
Richard G. Dekany
Suhail Dhawan
Andrew J. Drake
Dmitry A. Duev
Matthew Graham
Melissa L. Graham
Jacob Jencson
Emir Karamehmetoglu
Mansi M. Kasliwal
Shrinivas Kulkarni
A. A. Miller
James D. Neill
Thomas A. Prince
Reed Riddle
Benjamin Rusholme
Y. Sharma
Roger Smith
Niharika Sravan
Kirsty Taggart
Richard Walters
Lin Yan
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, Vol 952, Iss 2, p 119 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2023.

Abstract

Narrow transient emission lines (flash-ionization features) in early supernova (SN) spectra trace the presence of circumstellar material (CSM) around the massive progenitor stars of core-collapse SNe. The lines disappear within days after the SN explosion, suggesting that this material is spatially confined, and originates from enhanced mass loss shortly (months to a few years) prior to the explosion. We performed a systematic survey of H-rich (Type II) SNe discovered within less than 2 days from the explosion during the first phase of the Zwicky Transient Facility survey (2018–2020), finding 30 events for which a first spectrum was obtained within 36% at the 95% confidence level) confirms that elevated mass loss in massive stars prior to SN explosion is common. We find that SNe II showing flash-ionization features are not significantly brighter, nor bluer, nor more slowly rising than those without. This implies that CSM interaction does not contribute significantly to their early continuum emission, and that the CSM is likely optically thin. We measured the persistence duration of flash-ionization emission and find that most SNe show flash features for ≈5 days. Rarer events, with persistence timescales >10 days, are brighter and rise longer, suggesting these may be intermediate between regular SNe II and strongly interacting SNe IIn.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15384357
Volume :
952
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.591dd6010a744686a088aea1f2c80697
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acd8be