
TL;DR
Supernovae interacting with circumstellar material reveal complex stellar death processes, challenge existing models, and produce diverse, often luminous transients, with ongoing research aiming to understand their origins and implications.
Contribution
This paper reviews the diverse types of interacting supernovae, emphasizing their significance in revealing pre-explosion stellar instability and the complexities in modeling their shock interactions.
Findings
Interaction can produce super-luminous transients from normal SN energies.
CSM interaction obscures underlying explosion details.
Diverse progenitor scenarios and explosion types are involved.
Abstract
Supernovae (SNe) that show evidence of strong shock interaction between their ejecta and pre-existing, slower circumstellar material (CSM) constitute an interesting, diverse, and still poorly understood category of explosive transients. The chief reason that they are extremely interesting is because they tell us that in a subset of stellar deaths, the progenitor star may become wildly unstable in the years, decades, or centuries before explosion. This is something that has not been included in standard stellar evolution models, but may significantly change the end product and yield of that evolution, and complicates our attempts to map SNe to their progenitors. Another reason they are interesting is because CSM interaction is an efficient engine for making bright transients, allowing super-luminous transients to arise from normal SN explosion energies, and allowing transients of normal…
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