Massive stars exploding in a He-rich circumstellar medium $-$ X. Flash spectral features in the Type Ibn SN 2019cj and observations of SN 2018jmt
Z.-Y. Wang, A. Pastorello, K. Maeda, A. Reguitti, Y.-Z. Cai, D. Andrew, Howell, S. Benetti, D. Buckley, E. Cappellaro, R. Carini, R. Cartier, T.-W., Chen, N. Elias-Rosa, Q.-L. Fang, A. Gal-Yam, A. Gangopadhyay, M. Gromadzki,, W.-P. Gan, D. Hiramatsu, M.-K. Hu, C. Inserra

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed optical and near-infrared observations of two Type Ibn supernovae, analyzing their light curves and spectra to understand their progenitors and explosion mechanisms, highlighting the role of He-rich circumstellar media.
Contribution
It provides new observational data and light curve modeling for SN 2018jmt and SN 2019cj, revealing insights into their progenitor stars and circumstellar environments, and constraining explosion parameters.
Findings
Spectra show early flash ionisation lines that fade quickly.
Light curve modeling suggests progenitors are massive, stripped-envelope stars.
Ejecta masses are consistent with either canonical SN Ib or massive WR stars.
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared observations of two Type Ibn supernovae (SNe), SN 2018jmt and SN 2019cj. Their light curves have rise times of about 10 days, reaching an absolute peak magnitude of (SN 2018jmt) = 19.07 0.37 and (SN 2019cj) = 18.94 0.19 mag, respectively. The early-time spectra of SN 2018jmt are dominated by a blue continuum, accompanied by narrow (6001000 km~s) He I lines with P-Cygni profile. At later epochs, the spectra become more similar to those of the prototypical SN Ibn 2006jc. At early phases, the spectra of SN 2019cj show flash ionisation emission lines of C III, N III and He II superposed on a blue continuum. These features disappear after a few days, and then the spectra of SN 2019cj evolve similarly to those of SN 2018jmt. The spectra indicate that the two SNe exploded within a He-rich circumstellar medium (CSM) lost…
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