Using spectral modeling to break light-curve degeneracies of type II supernovae interacting with circumstellar material
Luc Dessart, W. V. Jacobson-Gal\'an

TL;DR
This study uses spectral modeling to resolve degeneracies in light-curve analysis of type II supernovae interacting with circumstellar material, revealing how CSM properties influence observable features and energy distribution.
Contribution
It introduces detailed radiation-hydrodynamics simulations of various CSM configurations, clarifying how CSM density and structure affect supernova luminosity and spectral signatures.
Findings
Dense, compact CSM can mimic early luminosity boosts of type II-P supernovae.
Optically thick, extended CSM produces lasting type IIn spectral features.
CSM interaction redistributes energy, reducing fastest ejecta and forming dense shells.
Abstract
A large fraction of red-supergiant stars seem to be enshrouded by circumstellar material (CSM) at the time of explosion. Relative to explosions in a vacuum, this CSM causes both a luminosity boost at early times as well as the presence of symmetric emission lines with a narrow core and electron-scattering wings typical of type IIn supernovae (SNe). For this study, we performed radiation-hydrodynamics and radiative transfer calculations for a variety of CSM configurations (i.e., compact, extended, and detached) and documented the resulting ejecta and radiation properties. We find that models with a dense, compact, and massive CSM of ~0.5Msun can match the early luminosity boost of type II-P SNe but fail to produce type IIn-like spectral signatures (aka ``flash features''). These only arise if the photon mean free path in the CSM is large enough (i.e, if the density is low enough) to…
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