A New Class of Luminous Transients and A First Census of Their Massive Stellar Progenitors
Todd A. Thompson, Jose L. Prieto, K. Z. Stanek, Matthew D. Kistler,, John F. Beacom, and Christopher S. Kochanek (Ohio State University)

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new class of luminous transients originating from dust-enshrouded massive stars, revealing that such short-lived, obscured phases are more common than previously thought and have significant implications for stellar evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new class of transients linked to rare, dust-enshrouded massive star progenitors and estimates their occurrence rate relative to supernovae.
Findings
Transients are optically faint with narrow emission lines.
Progenitors are extremely rare among massive stars (~1/10,000).
Dust-enshrouded phase lasts about 10,000 years before explosion.
Abstract
The progenitors of SN 2008S and the 2008 transient in NGC300 were dust-enshrouded, with extremely red mid-infrared (MIR) colors and relatively low luminosities. The transients were optically faint (-13 < M_V < -15) compared to normal core-collapse supernovae (SNe), and their spectra exhibited narrow emission lines. These events are unique among transient-progenitor pairs and hence constitute a new class. Whether they are true SNe or bright massive-star eruptions, we argue that their rate is ~20% of the SN rate. This fact is remarkable in light of the observation that a very small fraction of all massive stars have the MIR colors of the SN 2008S and NGC300 progenitors, as we show using MIR and optical luminosity, color, and variability properties of massive stars in M33. We find that the fraction of massive stars with colors consistent with these progenitors is 1/10000. In fact, only <…
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