Asymmetries and Circumstellar Interaction in the Type II SN 2024bch
Jennifer E. Andrews, Manisha Shrestha, K. Azalee Bostroem, Yize Dong,, Jeniveve Pearson, M. M. Fausnaugh, David J. Sand, S. Valenti, Aravind P., Ravi, Emily Hoang, Griffin Hosseinzadeh, Ilya Ilyin, Daryl Janzen, M.J., Lundquist, Nicolaz Meza, Nathan Smith, Saurabh W. Jha

TL;DR
This study of SN 2024bch reveals early spectral features, rapid brightness increase, and signs of asymmetric ejecta and circumstellar interaction, providing insights into the mass-loss history of its red supergiant progenitor.
Contribution
It offers detailed multi-epoch observations and analysis of a Type II supernova, highlighting asymmetries and high mass-loss rates not typical of quiescent RSGs.
Findings
Early high ionization emission lines observed and then disappeared.
High mass-loss rate inferred, exceeding typical RSG winds.
Evidence of asymmetric ejecta and circumstellar interaction.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive multi-epoch photometric and spectroscopic study of SN 2024bch, a nearby (19.9 Mpc) Type II supernova (SN) with prominent early high ionization emission lines. Optical spectra from 2.9 days after the estimated explosion reveal narrow lines of H I, He II, C IV, and N IV that disappear by day 6. High cadence photometry from the ground and TESS show that the SN brightened quickly and reached a peak M 17.8 mag within a week of explosion, and late-time photometry suggests a Ni mass of 0.050 M. High-resolution spectra from day 8 and 43 trace the unshocked circumstellar medium (CSM) and indicate a wind velocity of 30--40 km s, a value consistent with a red supergiant (RSG) progenitor. Comparisons between models and the early spectra suggest a pre-SN mass-loss rate of , which…
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