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Record-breaking polarization from the interacting superluminous supernova 2017hcc

Authors :
Mauerhan, Jon C.
Smith, Nathan
Williams, G. Grant
Smith, Paul S.
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Bilinski, Christopher
Zheng, WeiKang
Brink, Thomas G.
Hoffman, Jennifer L.
Leonard, Douglas C.
Milne, Peter
Jeffers, Benjamin
Modak, Shaunak
Stegman, Samantha
Zhang, Keto D.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present multiepoch spectropolarimetry of the superluminous interacting Type IIn supernova SN2017hcc, covering 16 to 391 days after explosion. In our first epoch we measure continuum polarization as high as 6%, making SN 2017hcc the most intrinsically polarized SN ever reported. During the first 29 days of coverage, when the polarization is strongest, the continuum polarization has a wavelength dependence that rises toward blue wavelengths, and becomes wavelength independent by day 45. The polarization strength drops rapidly during the first month, even as the SN flux is still climbing to peak brightness. Nonetheless, record-high polarization is maintained until day 68, at which point the source polarization declines to 1.9%, comparable to peak levels in previous well-studied SNe IIn. Thereafter the SN continues in polarization decline, while exhibiting only minor changes in position angle on the sky. The blue slope of the polarized continuum during the first month, accompanied by short-lived polarized flux for Balmer emission, suggests that an aspherical distribution of dust grains in pre-shock circumstellar material (CSM) is echoing the SN IIn spectrum and strongly influencing the polarization, while the subsequent decline during the wavelength-independent phase appears broadly consistent with electron scattering near the SN/CSM interface. The persistence of the polarization position angle between these two phases suggests that the pre-existing CSM responsible for the dust scattering at early times is part of the same geometric structure as the electron-scattering region that dominates the polarization at later times. SN2017hcc appears to be yet another, but much more extreme, case of aspherical yet well-ordered CSM in Type IIn SNe, possibly resulting from pre-SN mass loss shaped by a binary progenitor system.<br />Comment: Submitted to MNRAS April 21, 2023

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2304.12368
Document Type :
Working Paper