Progenitor and Close-In Circumstellar Medium of Type II Supernova 2020fqv from High-Cadence Photometry and Ultra-Rapid UV Spectroscopy
Samaporn Tinyanont, Ryan Ridden-Harper, Ryan Foley, Viktoriya, Morozova, Charles Kilpatrick, Georgios Dimitriadis, Lindsay DeMarchi,, Alexander Gagliano, Wynn V. Jacobson-Gal\'an, Alexander Messick, Justin, Pierel, Anthony Piro, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz, Matthew Siebert

TL;DR
This study combines high-cadence photometry and UV spectroscopy to analyze the progenitor and circumstellar medium of SN 2020fqv, revealing a complex mass-loss history of a typical red supergiant star before explosion.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of the circumstellar environment and mass-loss processes of a Type II supernova progenitor using multi-wavelength, high-resolution data.
Findings
Approximately 0.23 solar masses of CSM within 1450 solar radii.
CSM likely caused by an eruption 300 days before explosion.
Progenitor identified as a red supergiant with 13.5-15 solar masses.
Abstract
We present observations of SN 2020fqv, a Virgo-cluster Type II core-collapse supernova (CCSN) with a high temporal resolution light curve from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) covering the time of explosion; ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) starting 3.3 days post-explosion; ground-based spectroscopic observations starting 1.1~days post-explosion; along with extensive photometric observations. Massive stars have complicated mass-loss histories leading up to their death as CCSNe, creating circumstellar medium (CSM) with which the SNe interact. Observations during the first few days post-explosion can provide important information about the mass-loss rate during the late stages of stellar evolution. Model fits to the quasi-bolometric light curve of SN 2020fqv reveal ~0.23 of CSM confined within ~1450 ( cm)…
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