Luminous Blue Variable eruptions and related transients: Diversity of progenitors and outburst properties
Nathan Smith, Weidong Li, Jeffrey M. Silverman, Mo Ganeshalingam, and, Alexei V. Filippenko

TL;DR
This paper presents new observations and a comparative analysis of luminous blue variable eruptions and related transients, highlighting their diversity, possible physical mechanisms, and implications for understanding stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides new photometric and spectroscopic data for several transients, discusses their properties, and proposes a revised classification for SN1961V based on eruption characteristics.
Findings
LBV-like eruptions show a wide range of timescales and luminosities.
Some transients are linked to dust-enshrouded progenitors.
SN1961V is likely a true supernova, not an impostor.
Abstract
We present new light curves and spectra for a number of extragalactic optical transients or "SN impostors" related to giant eruptions of LBVs, and we provide a comparative discussion of LBV-like giant eruptions known to date. New data include photometry and spectroscopy of SNe1999bw, 2000ch, 2001ac, 2002bu, 2006bv, and 2010dn. SN2010dn resembles SN2008S and NGC 300-OT, whereas SN2002bu shows spectral evolution from a normal LBV at early times to a twin of these cooler transients at late times. SN2008S, NGC300-OT, and SN2010dn appear to be special cases of a broader eruptive phenomenon where the progenitor star was enshrouded by dust. Examining the full sample, SN impostors have range of timescales from a day to decades, potentially suffering multiple eruptions. The upper end of the luminosity distribution overlaps with the least luminous SNe. The low end of the luminosity distribution…
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