A Carbon/Oxygen-dominated Atmosphere Days After Explosion for the "Super-Chandrasekhar" Type Ia SN 2020esm
Georgios Dimitriadis, Ryan J. Foley, Nikki Arendse, David A. Coulter,, Wynn V. Jacobson-Gal\'an, Matthew R. Siebert, Luca Izzo, David O. Jones,, Charles D. Kilpatrick, Yen-Chen Pan, Kirsty Taggart, Katie Auchettl, Christa, Gall, Jens Hjorth, Daniel Kasen, Anthony L. Piro

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed observations of SN 2020esm, a super-Chandrasekhar Type Ia supernova, revealing a pristine carbon/oxygen atmosphere shortly after explosion, supporting the merger of two white dwarfs as its origin.
Contribution
It provides the first early spectra showing a nearly pure carbon/oxygen atmosphere in a super-Chandrasekhar SN Ia, suggesting a merger origin and offering insights into explosion mechanisms.
Findings
Early spectra show pristine carbon/oxygen atmosphere.
Ejecta mass exceeds Chandrasekhar limit.
High nickel-56 mass indicates a luminous explosion.
Abstract
Seeing pristine material from the donor star in a Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) explosion can reveal the nature of the binary system. In this paper, we present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2020esm, one of the best-studied SNe of the class of "super-Chandrasekhar" SNe Ia (SC SNe Ia), with data obtained to +360 days relative to peak brightness, obtained from a variety of ground- and space-based telescopes. Initially misclassified as a Type II supernova, SN 2020esm peaked at mag, declined slowly ( mag), and had particularly blue UV and optical colors at early times. Photometrically and spectroscopically, SN 2020esm evolved similarly to other SC SNe Ia, showing the usual low ejecta velocities, weak intermediate mass elements (IMEs), and the enhanced fading at late times, but its early spectra are unique. Our first few spectra…
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