ASASSN-15no: The Supernova that plays hide-and-seek
S. Benetti, L. Zampieri, A. Pastorello, E. Cappellaro, M. L. Pumo, N., Elias-Rosa, P. Ochner, G. Terreran, L. Tomasella, S. Taubenberger, M., Turatto, A. Morales-Garoffolo, A. Harutyunyan, L. Tartaglia

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed observational and modeling study of the peculiar supernova ASASSN-15no, revealing its interaction with circumstellar material and providing insights into its explosion parameters and progenitor system.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis combining optical observations and modeling to understand the supernova's interaction with circumstellar material and its explosion characteristics.
Findings
Spectral evolution shows transition from blackbody to interacting supernova features.
Model estimates ejecta mass of 2.6 solar masses and explosion energy of 0.8 x 10^51 erg.
Evidence of interaction with H-poor circumstellar material formed years before explosion.
Abstract
We report the results of our follow-up campaign of the peculiar supernova ASASSN-15no, based on optical data covering ~300 days of its evolution. Initially the spectra show a pure blackbody continuum. After few days, the HeI 5876 A transition appears with a P-Cygni profile and an expansion velocity of about 8700 km/s. Fifty days after maximum, the spectrum shows signs typically seen in interacting supernovae. A broad (FWHM~8000 km/s) Halpha becomes more prominent with time until ~150 days after maximum and quickly declines later on. At these phases Halpha starts to show an intermediate component, which together with the blue pseudo-continuum are clues that the ejecta begin to interact with the CSM. The spectra at the latest phases look very similar to the nebular spectra of stripped-envelope SNe. The early part (the first 40 days after maximum) of the bolometric curve, which peaks at a…
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