The Double-Peaked SN2013ge: a Type Ib/c SN with an Asymmetric Mass Ejection or an Extended Progenitor Envelope
M. R. Drout, D. Milisavljevic, J. Parrent, R. Margutti, A. Kamble, A., M. Soderberg, P. Challis, R. Chornock, W. Fong, S. Frank, N. Gehrels, M. L., Graham, E. Hsiao, K. Itagaki, M. Kasliwal, R. P. Kirshner, D. Macomb, G. H., Marion, J. Norris, M. M. Phillips

TL;DR
SN2013ge, a well-observed Type Ib/c supernova, exhibits early light curve components suggesting either an extended progenitor envelope or asymmetric nickel ejection, with implications for progenitor structure and explosion dynamics.
Contribution
This study provides detailed early-time observations of SN2013ge, revealing two distinct UV light curve components and proposing two novel progenitor scenarios based on early emission analysis.
Findings
Early UV light curve shows two components with different origins.
Spectra indicate high-velocity, narrow features and weak helium presence.
Radio and X-ray limits constrain progenitor mass-loss rates.
Abstract
We present extensive observations of the Type Ib/c SN2013ge from -13 to +457 days, including spectra and Swift UV-optical photometry beginning 2-4 days post-explosion. This data set makes SN2013ge one of the best observed normal Type Ib/c SN at early times---when the light curve is particularly sensitive to the progenitor configuration and mixing of radioactive elements---and reveals two distinct light curve components in the UV bands. The first component rises over 4-5 days and is visible for the first week post-explosion. Spectra of the first component have blue continua and show a plethora of high velocity (~15,000 km/s) but narrow (~3500 km/s) features, indicating that the line-forming region is restricted. The explosion parameters estimated for the bulk explosion are standard for Type Ib/c SN, and there is evidence for weak He features at early times. In addition, SN2013ge exploded…
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