The X-ray Luminous Type Ibn SN 2022ablq: Estimates of Pre-explosion Mass Loss and Constraints on Precursor Emission
C. Pellegrino, M. Modjaz, Y. Takei, D. Tsuna, M. Newsome, T., Pritchard, R. Baer-Way, K. A. Bostroem, P. Chandra, P. Charalampopoulos, Y., Dong, J. Farah, D. A. Howell, C. McCully, S. Mohamed, E. Padilla Gonzalez, G., Terreran

TL;DR
This study presents detailed multi-wavelength observations of the rare Type Ibn supernova SN 2022ablq, revealing complex pre-explosion mass-loss behavior and constraining progenitor models through X-ray luminosity and absence of precursor emission.
Contribution
It provides the second X-ray detection of a Type Ibn supernova, estimates variable pre-explosion mass-loss rates, and constrains progenitor scenarios by comparing observations with numerical models.
Findings
SN 2022ablq is more X-ray luminous than SN 2006jc.
Pre-explosion mass-loss rates peaked 0.5-2 years before explosion.
Progenitor likely involved eruptive outbursts or binary interactions, not steady winds.
Abstract
Type Ibn supernovae (SNe Ibn) are rare stellar explosions powered primarily by interaction between the SN ejecta and H-poor, He-rich material lost by their progenitor stars. Multi-wavelength observations, particularly in the X-rays, of SNe Ibn constrain their poorly-understood progenitor channels and mass-loss mechanisms. Here we present Swift X-ray, ultraviolet, and ground-based optical observations of the Type Ibn SN 2022ablq -- only the second SN Ibn with X-ray detections to date. While similar to the prototypical Type Ibn SN 2006jc in the optical, SN 2022ablq is roughly an order of magnitude more luminous in the X-rays, reaching unabsorbed luminosities 310 erg s between 0.2 - 10 keV. From these X-ray observations we infer time-varying mass-loss rates between 0.05 - 0.5 yr peaking 0.5 - 2 yr before explosion. This complex mass-loss…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
