Early Spectroscopy and Dense Circumstellar Medium Interaction in SN 2023ixf
K. Azalee Bostroem, Jeniveve Pearson, Manisha Shrestha, David J. Sand,, Stefano Valenti, Saurabh W. Jha, Jennifer E. Andrews, Nathan Smith, Giacomo, Terreran, Elizabeth Green, Yize Dong, Michael Lundquist, Joshua Haislip,, Emily T. Hoang, Griffin Hosseinzadeh, Daryl Janzen

TL;DR
This study presents early optical spectroscopic observations of SN 2023ixf, revealing rapid evolution of circumstellar interaction features, and uses models to estimate high progenitor mass-loss rates and circumstellar material properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed early spectroscopic analysis of SN 2023ixf, identifying unique emission features and constraining circumstellar environment parameters through comparison with models.
Findings
High-ionization emission features fade within 7 days.
Mass-loss rate estimated at 10^{-3} to 10^{-2} solar masses per year.
Circumstellar material extends to about 5×10^{14} cm.
Abstract
We present the optical spectroscopic evolution of SN~2023ixf seen in sub-night cadence spectra from 1.18 to 14 days after explosion. We identify high-ionization emission features, signatures of interaction with material surrounding the progenitor star, that fade over the first 7 days, with rapid evolution between spectra observed within the same night. We compare the emission lines present and their relative strength to those of other supernovae with early interaction, finding a close match to SN~2020pni and SN~2017ahn in the first spectrum and SN~2014G at later epochs. To physically interpret our observations we compare them to CMFGEN models with confined, dense circumstellar material around a red supergiant progenitor from the literature. We find that very few models reproduce the blended \NC{} emission lines observed in the first few spectra and their rapid disappearance thereafter,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
