Type IIP supernova light curves affected by the acceleration of red supergiant winds
Takashi J. Moriya, Francisco F\"orster, Sung-Chul Yoon, G\"otz, Gr\"afener, Sergei I. Blinnikov

TL;DR
This study models how accelerated winds from red supergiant stars influence the early light curves of Type IIP supernovae, revealing that dense circumstellar media can delay shock breakout and alter observable features.
Contribution
It introduces the first synthetic light-curve models of Type IIP supernovae considering wind acceleration effects on circumstellar density.
Findings
Dense circumstellar media can delay shock breakout in supernovae.
Mass-loss rates of 1e-3 to 1e-2 Msun/yr explain typical early light curve rise times.
Models show significant impact of wind acceleration on early supernova light curves.
Abstract
We introduce the first synthetic light-curve model set of Type IIP supernovae exploded within circumstellar media in which the acceleration of the red supergiant winds is taken into account. Because wind acceleration makes the wind velocities near the progenitors low, the density of the immediate vicinity of the red supergiant supernova progenitors can be higher than that extrapolated by using a constant terminal wind velocity. Therefore, even if the mass-loss rate of the progenitor is relatively low, it can have a dense circumstellar medium at the immediate stellar vicinity and the early light curves of Type IIP supernovae are significantly affected by it. We adopt a simple beta velocity law to formulate the wind acceleration. We provide bolometric and multicolor light curves of Type IIP supernovae exploding within such accelerated winds from the combinations of three progenitors, 12 -…
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.
