The Transitional Stripped-Envelope SN 2008ax: Spectral Evolution and Evidence for Large Asphericity
R. Chornock, A. V. Filippenko, W. Li, G. H. Marion, R. J. Foley, M., Modjaz, M. Rafelski, G. D. Becker, W. H. de Vries, P. Garnavich, R. A., Jorgenson, D. K. Lynch, A. L. Malec, E. C. Moran, M. T. Murphy, R. J. Rudy,, R. W. Russell, J. M. Silverman, T. N. Steele, A. Stockton

TL;DR
This study of SN 2008ax provides detailed spectral and polarimetric observations revealing a transition from hydrogen-rich to helium-dominated spectra and evidence of large asphericity in the ejecta, offering insights into supernova explosion geometry.
Contribution
First detailed early-time spectral and spectropolarimetric analysis of SN 2008ax, revealing large asphericities and hydrogen content in a Type Ib supernova.
Findings
Spectral evolution from hydrogen to helium dominance.
Detection of large asphericity in outer ejecta.
Evidence of asphericity extending to the supernova core.
Abstract
Supernova (SN) 2008ax in NGC 4490 was discovered within hours after shock breakout, presenting the rare opportunity to study a core-collapse SN beginning with the initial envelope-cooling phase immediately following shock breakout. We present an extensive sequence of optical and near-infrared spectra, as well as three epochs of optical spectropolarimetry. Our initial spectra, taken two days after shock breakout, are dominated by hydrogen Balmer lines at high velocity. However, by maximum light, He I lines dominated the optical and near-infrared spectra, which closely resembled those of normal Type Ib supernovae (SNe Ib) such as SN 1999ex. This spectroscopic transition defines Type IIb supernovae, but the strong similarity of SN 2008ax to normal SNe Ib beginning near maximum light, including an absorption feature near 6270A due to H-alpha at high velocities, suggests that many objects…
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