Type Ia Supernovae Strongly Interacting with Their Circumstellar Medium
Jeffrey M. Silverman, Peter E. Nugent, Avishay Gal-Yam, Mark Sullivan,, D. Andrew Howell, Alexei V. Filippenko, Iair Arcavi, Sagi Ben-Ami, Joshua S., Bloom, S. Bradley Cenko, Yi Cao, Ryan Chornock, Kelsey I. Clubb, Alison L., Coil, Ryan J. Foley, Melissa L. Graham

TL;DR
This paper systematically studies a rare subclass of Type Ia supernovae interacting strongly with their circumstellar medium, revealing their spectral features, host galaxy types, and potential dust formation, thus advancing understanding of their progenitors.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of 16 SNe Ia-CSM, including new spectra, spectral characteristics, and host galaxy information, highlighting their unique properties and possible progenitor scenarios.
Findings
Spectra dominated by Hα emission with ~2000 km/s width
Large Hα/Hβ intensity ratios observed
Host galaxies are late-type spirals or dwarf irregulars
Abstract
Owing to their utility for measurements of cosmic acceleration, Type Ia supernovae (SNe) are perhaps the best-studied class of SNe, yet the progenitor systems of these explosions largely remain a mystery. A rare subclass of SNe Ia show evidence of strong interaction with their circumstellar medium (CSM), and in particular, a hydrogen-rich CSM; we refer to them as SNe Ia-CSM. In the first systematic search for such systems, we have identified 16 SNe Ia-CSM, and here we present new spectra of 13 of them. Six SNe Ia-CSM have been well-studied previously, three were previously known but are analyzed in-depth for the first time here, and seven are new discoveries from the Palomar Transient Factory. The spectra of all SNe Ia-CSM are dominated by H{\alpha} emission (with widths of ~2000 km/s) and exhibit large H{\alpha}/H{\beta} intensity ratios (perhaps due to collisional excitation of…
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