A Bright Ultraviolet Excess in the Transitional 02es-like Type Ia Supernova 2019yvq
J. Burke, D. A. Howell, S. K. Sarbadhicary, D. J. Sand, R. C. Amaro,, D. Hiramatsu, C. McCully, C. Pellegrino, J. E. Andrews, P. J. Brown, Koichi, Itagaki, M. Shahbandeh, K. A. Bostroem, L. Chomiuk, E. Y. Hsiao, Nathan, Smith, S. Valenti

TL;DR
SN 2019yvq, a Type Ia supernova, exhibits an unprecedented early UV excess, challenging existing models and suggesting a need for progenitor systems capable of producing isotropic UV flux.
Contribution
This study provides detailed observations of SN 2019yvq's unique UV excess and evaluates multiple models, highlighting the limitations of current theories for 02es-like supernovae.
Findings
Early UV excess outshines peak brightness in SN 2019yvq.
No existing model fully explains all observed features.
Early excesses in 02es-like SNe suggest isotropic UV flux from progenitors.
Abstract
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of the nearby Type Ia SN 2019yvq, from its discovery 1 day after explosion to 100 days after its peak brightness. This SN exhibits several unusual features, most notably an extremely bright UV excess seen within 5 days of its explosion. As seen in Swift UV data, this early excess outshines its "peak" brightness, making this object more extreme than other SNe with early UV/blue excesses (e.g. iPTF14atg and SN 2017cbv). In addition, it was underluminous (), relatively quickly declining (), and shows red colors past its early blue bump. Unusual (although not unprecedented) spectral features include extremely broad-lined and high-velocity Si absorption. Despite obvious differences in peak spectra, we classify SN 2019yvq as a transitional member of the 02es-like subclass due to its…
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