Double "acct": a distinct double-peaked supernova matching pulsational pair-instability models
C. R. Angus, S. E. Woosley, R. J. Foley, M. Nicholl, V. A. Villar, K., Taggart, M. Pursiainen, P. Ramsden, S. Srivastav, H. F. Stevance, T. Moore,, K. Auchettl, W. B. Hoogendam, N. Khetan, S. K. Yadavalli, G. Dimitriadis, A., Gagliano, M. R. Siebert, A. Aamer, T. de Boer

TL;DR
This paper reports on a unique double-peaked supernova, SN2020acct, whose properties align with pulsational pair-instability models, providing new insights into massive star explosions and their environments.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation and analysis of a double-peaked supernova matching pulsational pair-instability predictions, expanding understanding of such stellar phenomena.
Findings
The supernova has two distinct peaks separated by 58 days.
The first peak shows signs of interaction with hydrogen-free circumstellar material.
The event rate is less than 0.1% of all core-collapse supernovae.
Abstract
We present multi-wavelength data of SN2020acct, a double-peaked stripped-envelope supernova (SN) in NGC2981 at ~150 Mpc. The two peaks are temporally distinct, with maxima separated by 58 rest-frame days, and a factor of 20 reduction in flux between. The first is luminous (M = -18.00 0.02 mag), blue (g - r = 0.27 0.03 mag), and displays spectroscopic signatures of interaction with hydrogen-free circumstellar material. The second peak is fainter (M = -17.29 0.03 mag), and spectroscopically similar to an evolved stripped-envelope SNe, with strong blended forbidden [Ca II] and [O II] features. No other known double-peak SN exhibits a light curve similar to that of SN 2020acct. We find the likelihood of two individual SNe occurring in the same star-forming region within that time to be highly improbable, while an implausibly fine-tuned configuration would be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
