Late-Time Circumstellar Interaction in a Spitzer Selected Sample of Type IIn Supernovae
Ori D. Fox, Alexei V. Filippenko (1), Michael F. Skrutskie (2),, Jeffrey M. Silverman (3), Mohan Ganeshalingam, S. Bradley Cenko, and Kelsey, I. Clubb (1) ((1) UC Berkeley, (2) University of Virginia, (3) UT Austin)

TL;DR
This study investigates late-time infrared emission from Type IIn supernovae, revealing ongoing circumstellar interaction and providing insights into progenitor mass-loss histories through multi-wavelength observations.
Contribution
It presents new multi-wavelength follow-up data confirming ongoing circumstellar interaction in a sample of SNe IIn and constrains progenitor mass-loss characteristics.
Findings
Nine SNe IIn show ongoing mid-infrared emission.
Optical and X-ray data confirm radiative CSM interaction.
Dust-shell destruction limits progenitor mass-loss models.
Abstract
Type IIn supernovae (SNe IIn) are a rare (< 10%) subclass of core-collapse SNe that exhibit relatively narrow emission lines from a dense, pre-existing circumstellar medium (CSM). In 2009, a warm Spitzer survey observed 30 SNe IIn discovered in 2003 - 2008 and detected 10 SNe at distances out to 175 Mpc with unreported late-time infrared emission, in some cases more than 5 years post-discovery. For this single epoch of data, the warm-dust parameters suggest the presence of a radiative heating source consisting of optical/X-ray emission continuously generated by ongoing CSM interaction. Here we present multi-wavelength follow-up observations of this sample of 10 SNe IIn and the well-studied Type IIn SN 2010jl. A recent epoch of Spitzer observations reveals ongoing mid-infrared emission from nine of the SNe in this sample. We also detect three of the SNe in archival WISE data, in addition…
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