Common Envelope ejection for a Luminous Red Nova in M101
N. Blagorodnova, R. Kotak, J. Polshaw, M. M. Kasliwal, Y. Cao, A. M., Cody, G. B. Doran, N. Elias-Rosa, M. Fraser, C. Fremling, C., Gonzalez-Fernandez, J. Harmanen, J. Jencson, E. Kankare, R.-P. Kudritzki, S., R. Kulkarni, E. Magnier, I. Manulis, F. J. Masci, S. Mattila

TL;DR
This study analyzes a luminous red transient in M101, suggesting it resulted from a rare common envelope ejection in a binary system with an evolved progenitor star.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence and modeling that link the transient to a binary common envelope ejection, filling a gap between known merger events.
Findings
Progenitor is an F-type yellow supergiant with ~8.7×10^4 Lsun.
Transient likely caused by a rare common envelope ejection.
Progenitor's initial mass estimated at 18±1 Msun.
Abstract
We present the results of optical, near-infrared, and mid-infrared observations of M101 OT2015-1 (PSN J14021678+5426205), a luminous red transient in the Pinwheel galaxy (M101), spanning a total of 16 years. The lightcurve showed two distinct peaks with absolute magnitudes and , on 2014 November 11 and 2015 February 17, respectively. The spectral energy distributions during the second maximum show a cool outburst temperature of 3700 K and low expansion velocities (300 \kms) for the H I, Ca II, Ba II and K I lines. From archival data spanning 15 to 8 years before the outburst, we find a single source consistent with the optically discovered transient which we attribute to being the progenitor; it has properties consistent with being an F-type yellow supergiant with ~~8.7~ \Lsun, 7000~K and an…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
