Metallicity at the explosion sites of interacting transients
F. Taddia, J. Sollerman, C. Fremling, A. Pastorello, G. Leloudas, C., Fransson, A. Nyholm, M. D. Stritzinger, M. Ergon, R. Roy, K. Migotto

TL;DR
This study investigates the metallicity at the explosion sites of various interacting transients, revealing differences among subtypes and suggesting diverse progenitor origins, including massive stars and red supergiants.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive metallicity measurements at the locations of 60 interacting transients, comparing their environments and exploring progenitor implications.
Findings
SN impostors occur in lower metallicity environments than SNe IIn.
SN IIn-L show higher metallicities, similar to SNe IIL/P.
Long-lasting SNe IIn have metallicities akin to SN impostors.
Abstract
Context. Some circumstellar-interacting (CSI) supernovae (SNe) are produced by the explosions of massive stars that have lost mass shortly before the SN explosion. There is evidence that the precursors of some SNe IIn were luminous blue variable (LBV) stars. For a small number of CSI SNe, outbursts have been observed before the SN explosion. Eruptive events of massive stars are named as SN impostors (SN IMs) and whether they herald a forthcoming SN or not is still unclear. The large variety of observational properties of CSI SNe suggests the existence of other progenitors, such as red supergiant (RSG) stars with superwinds. Furthermore, the role of metallicity in the mass loss of CSI SN progenitors is still largely unexplored. Aims. Our goal is to gain insight on the nature of the progenitor stars of CSI SNe by studying their environments, in particular the metallicity at their…
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