Three Core-Collapse Supernovae with Nebular Hydrogen Emission
J. Sollerman, S. Yang, S. Schulze, N. L. Strotjohann, A. Jerkstrand,, S. D. Van Dyk, E. C. Kool, C. Barbarino, T. G. Brink, R. Bruch, K. De, A. V., Filippenko, C. Fremling, K. C. Patra, D. Perley, L. Yan, Y. Yang, I., Andreoni, R. Campbell, M. Coughlin, M. Kasliwal, Y.-L. Kim

TL;DR
This paper studies three core-collapse supernovae with nebular hydrogen emission, analyzing their light curves, spectra, and progenitors to understand their explosion mechanisms and circumstellar environments.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations and comparisons of nebular spectra for multiple supernovae, revealing how circumstellar interaction influences spectral features and light curves.
Findings
SN 2020jfo has a short ~65 day plateau indicating ~5 Msun ejecta.
Progenitor of SN 2020jfo likely around 12 Msun, with stable nickel detected.
SN 2020amv shows CSM interaction with a dense shell; SN 2020jfv transitions from Type IIb to IIn.
Abstract
We present SN 2020jfo, a Type IIP supernova in the nearby galaxy M61. Optical light curves from the Zwicky Transient Facility, complemented with data from Swift and near-IR photometry are presented. The 350-day duration bolometric light curve exhibits a relatively short (~ 65 days) plateau. This implies a moderate ejecta mass (~ 5 Msun). A series of spectroscopy is presented, including spectropolarimetric observations. The nebular spectra are dominated by Halpha but also reveal emission lines from oxygen and calcium. Comparisons to synthetic nebular spectra indicate an initial progenitor mass of about 12 Msun. Stable nickel is present in the nebular spectrum, with a super-solar Ni/Fe ratio. Several years of pre-discovery data are examined, but no signs of pre-cursor activity is found. Pre-explosion Hubble Space Telescope imaging reveals a probable progenitor star, detected only in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
