SN 2017gci: a nearby Type I Superluminous Supernova with a bumpy tail
Achille Fiore, Ting-Wan Chen, Anders Jerkstrand, Stefano Benetti,, Riccardo Ciolfi, Cosimo Inserra, Enrico Cappellaro, Andrea Pastorello,, Giorgos Leloudas, Steve Schulze, Marco Berton, Claudia Patricia Guti\'errez,, Jamison Burke, Mariusz Gromadzki, Matt Nicholl, Arne Rau

TL;DR
SN 2017gci is a nearby Type I superluminous supernova exhibiting both slow and fast evolution features, with evidence of late ejecta interaction with circumstellar material, modeled effectively by magnetar or CSM interaction scenarios.
Contribution
This study provides detailed optical observations and modeling of SN 2017gci, revealing its hybrid evolution and potential power sources, expanding understanding of SLSN I diversity.
Findings
Light curves show two rebrightenings at ~103 and 142 days.
Broad emission feature around 6520 Å suggests ejecta-CSM interaction.
Models indicate either magnetar or CSM interaction can power the supernova.
Abstract
We present and discuss the optical spectro-photometric observations of the nearby (z=0.087) Type I superluminous supernova (SLSN I) SN 2017gci, whose peak K-corrected absolute magnitude reaches Mg=-21.5 mag. Its photometric and spectroscopic evolution includes features of both slow and of fast evolving SLSN I, thus favoring a continuum distribution between the two SLSN-I subclasses. In particular, similarly to other SLSNe I, the multi-band light curves of SN 2017gci show two rebrightenings at about 103 and 142 days after the maximum light. Interestingly, this broadly agrees with a broad emission feature emerging around 6520 A after 51 days from the maximum light, which is followed by a sharp knee in the light curve. If we interpret this feature as Halpha, this could support the fact that the bumps are the signature of late interactions of the ejecta with a (hydrogen rich) circumstellar…
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