The interacting nature of dwarf galaxies hosting superluminous supernovae
Simon Vanggaard {\O}rum, David Lykke Ivens, Patrick Strandberg,, Giorgos Leloudas, Allison W. S. Man, Steve Schulze

TL;DR
This study finds that dwarf galaxies hosting superluminous supernovae I frequently have nearby companion galaxies, indicating that interactions may play a role in their progenitors' formation, beyond just low metallicity conditions.
Contribution
It provides statistical evidence that SLSN I host galaxies are often in interacting systems, highlighting the importance of galaxy interactions in their progenitor formation.
Findings
Approximately 50% of SLSN I hosts have close companions.
SLSN I hosts have more companions than GRB hosts, but not significantly.
Host galaxies are often in regions with higher-than-average object density.
Abstract
(Abridged) Type I superluminous supernovae (SLSNe I) are rare, powerful explosions whose mechanism and progenitors remain elusive. SLSNe I show a preference for low-metallicity, actively star-forming dwarf galaxies. We investigate whether the hosts of SLSNe I show increased evidence for interaction. We use a sample of 42 SLSN I images obtained with and measure the number of companion galaxies by counting the objects detected within a given radius from the host. As a comparison, we used two Monte Carlo-based methods to estimate the expected average number of companion objects in the same images, as well as a sample of 32 galaxies that have hosted long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). About 50% of SLSN I hosts have at least one major companion (within a flux ratio of 1:4) within 5 kpc. The average number of major companions per SLSN I host galaxy is . Our…
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