NGC 2770: high supernova rate due to interaction
Micha{\l} J. Micha{\l}owski, Christina Th\"one, Antonio de Ugarte, Postigo, Jens Hjorth, Aleksandra Lesniewska, Natalia Gotkiewicz, Wojciech, Dimitrov, Maciej P. Koprowski, Peter Kamphuis

TL;DR
NGC 2770's high supernova rate is linked to recent star formation enhancement caused by galaxy interactions, despite normal long-term star formation indicators, highlighting the importance of recent activity in supernova production.
Contribution
This study reinterprets star formation indicators in NGC 2770, revealing recent enhancement due to galaxy interactions, and challenges previous assumptions about supernova progenitors and gas accretion.
Findings
High dust-corrected Halpha luminosity indicates recent star formation.
HI bridge and multiple companions suggest galaxy interactions.
No HI concentrations near supernova sites imply progenitors are not from recent gas accretion.
Abstract
Galaxies which hosted many core-collapse supernovae (SN) explosions can be used to study the conditions necessary for the formation of massive stars. NGC 2770 was dubbed a SN factory, because it hosted four core-collapse SNe in 20 years (three type Ib and one type IIn). Its star formation rate (SFR) was reported not to be enhanced and therefore not compatible with such a high SN rate. We aim at explaining the high SN rate of NGC 2770. We used archival HI line data for NGC 2770 and reinterpret the Halpha and optical continuum data. Even though the continuum-based SFR indicators do not yield high values, the dust-corrected Halpha luminosity implies a high SFR, consistent with the high SN rate. Such disparity between the SFR estimators is an indication of recently enhanced star formation activity, because the continuum indicators trace long timescale of the order of 100 Myr, unlike the…
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