The peculiar Ca-rich SN 2019ehk: Evidence for a Type IIb core-collapse supernova from a low mass stripped progenitor
Kishalay De, U. Christoffer Fremling, Avishay Gal-Yam, Ofer, Yaron, Mansi M. Kasliwal, S. R. Kulkarni

TL;DR
This study presents late-time observations and spectral analysis of SN 2019ehk, providing evidence that it is a low-mass core-collapse supernova of Type IIb from a stripped progenitor, distinct from thermonuclear Ca-rich transients.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed late-time photometry and spectral analysis confirming SN 2019ehk as a low-mass core-collapse Type IIb supernova from a stripped progenitor.
Findings
Oxygen mass estimate consistent with low-mass CO core explosion
Presence of hydrogen indicates a Type IIb supernova
High [Ca II]/[O I] ratio supports core-collapse origin
Abstract
The nature of the peculiar `Ca-rich' SN 2019ehk in the nearby galaxy M100 remains unclear. Its origin has been debated as either a stripped core-collapse supernova or a thermonuclear helium detonation event. Here, we present very late-time photometry of the transient obtained with the Keck I telescope at days from peak light. Using the photometry to perform accurate flux calibration of a contemporaneous nebular phase spectrum, we measure an [O I] luminosity of erg s and [Ca II] luminosity of erg s over the range of the uncertain extinction along the line of sight. We use these measurements to derive lower limits on the synthesized oxygen mass of M. The oxygen mass is a sensitive tracer of the progenitor mass for core-collapse supernovae, and our estimate is consistent with…
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.
