Back to Search Start Over

Evidence for Extended Hydrogen-Poor CSM in the Three-Peaked Light Curve of Stripped Envelope Ib Supernova

Authors :
Zenati, Yossef
Wang, Qinan
Bobrick, Alexey
DeMarchi, Lindsay
Glanz, Hila
Rozner, Mor
Rest, Armin
Metzger, Brian D.
Margutti, Raffaella
Gomez, Sebastian
Smith, Nathan
Toonen, Silvia
Bright, Joe S.
Norman, Colin
Foley, Ryan J.
Gagliano, Alexander
Krolik, Julian H.
Smartt, Stephen J.
Villar, Ashley V.
Narayan, Gautham
Fox, Ori
Auchettl, Katie
Brethauer, Daniel
Clocchiatti, Alejandro
Coelln, Sophie V.
Coppejans, Deanne L.
Dimitriadis, Georgios
Doroszmai, Andris
Drout, Maria
Jacobson-Galan, Wynn
Gao, Bore
Ridden-Harper, Ryan
Kilpatrick, Charles Donald
Laskar, Tanmoy
Matthews, David
Rest, Sofia
Smith, Ken W.
Stauffer, Candice McKenzie
Stroh, Michael C.
Strolger, Louis-Gregory
Terreran, Giacomo
Pierel, Justin D. R.
Piro, Anthony L.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present multi-band ATLAS photometry for SN 2019tsf, a stripped-envelope Type Ib supernova (SESN). The SN shows a triple-peaked light curve and a late (re-)brightening, making it unique among stripped-envelope systems. The re-brightening observations represent the latest photometric measurements of a multi-peaked Type Ib SN to date. As late-time photometry and spectroscopy suggest no hydrogen, the potential circumstellar material (CSM) must be H-poor. Moreover, late (>150 days) spectra show no signs of narrow emission lines, further disfavouring CSM interaction. On the contrary, an extended CSM structure is seen through a follow-up radio campaign with Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), indicating a source of bright optically thick radio emission at late times, which is highly unusual among H-poor SESNe. We attribute this phenomenology to an interaction of the supernova ejecta with spherically-asymmetric CSM, potentially disk-like, and we present several models that can potentially explain the origin of this rare Type Ib supernova. The warped disc model paints a novel picture, where the tertiary companion perturbs the progenitors CSM, that can explain the multi-peaked light curves of SNe, and here we apply it to SN 2019tsf. This SN 2019tsf is likely a member of a new sub-class of Type Ib SNe and among the recently discovered class of SNe that undergo mass transfer at the moment of explosion<br />Comment: 23 pages, Comments are welcome, Submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.07146
Document Type :
Working Paper