The evolution of superluminous supernova LSQ14mo and its interacting host galaxy system
T.-W. Chen, M. Nicholl, S. J. Smartt, P. A. Mazzali, R. M. Yates, T., J. Moriya, C. Inserra, N. Langer, T. Kruehler, Y.-C. Pan, R. Kotak, L., Galbany, P. Schady, P. Wiseman, J. Greiner, S. Schulze, A. W. S. Man, A., Jerkstrand, K. W. Smith, M. Dennefeld, C. Baltay, J. Bolmer

TL;DR
This study provides detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of superluminous supernova LSQ14mo, revealing its magnetar-powered explosion, interaction with circumstellar material, and the properties of its interacting host galaxy system.
Contribution
It offers one of the densest spectroscopic datasets for a fast-declining hydrogen-poor SLSN and links the supernova's properties to its low-metallicity, interacting host galaxy environment.
Findings
Magnetar model explains the bolometric lightcurve.
Supernova ejected ~6 M_sol of CO-rich material.
Host galaxy has low metallicity (~0.3 Z_sun) and interacting regions.
Abstract
We present and analyse an extensive dataset of the superluminous supernova (SLSN) LSQ14mo (z = 0.256), consisting of a multi-colour lightcurve from -30 d to +70 d in the rest-frame and a series of 6 spectra from PESSTO covering -7 d to +50 d. This is among the densest spectroscopic coverage, and best-constrained rising lightcurve, for a fast-declining hydrogen-poor SLSN. The bolometric lightcurve can be reproduced with a millisecond magnetar model with ~ 4 M_sol ejecta mass, and the temperature and velocity evolution is also suggestive of a magnetar as the power source. Spectral modelling indicates that the SN ejected ~ 6 M_sol of CO-rich material with a kinetic energy of ~ 7 x 10^51 erg, and suggests a partially thermalised additional source of luminosity between -2 d and +22 d. This may be due to interaction with a shell of material originating from pre-explosion mass loss. We further…
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