The bright long-lived Type II SN 2021irp powered by aspherical circumstellar material interaction (I): Revealing the energy source with photometry and spectroscopy
T. M. Reynolds, T. Nagao, R. Gottumukkala, C. P. Guti\'errez, T. Kangas, T. Kravtsov, H. Kuncarayakti, K. Maeda, N. Elias-Rosa, M. Fraser, R. Kotak, S. Mattila, A. Pastorello, P. J. Pessi, Y. -Z. Cai, J. P. U. Fynbo, M. Kawabata, P. Lundqvist, K. Matilainen, S. Moran

TL;DR
This paper studies the luminous, long-lasting Type II supernova 2021irp, revealing that its extraordinary brightness and duration are powered by asymmetric interaction with circumstellar material and dust formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that asymmetric CSM interaction is the main energy source for SN 2021irp, a previously unconfirmed mechanism for such luminous and long-lived Type II SNe.
Findings
SN 2021irp is more luminous and longer-lasting than typical Type II SNe.
Infrared excess indicates dust formation and pre-existing dust echo.
Spectral features confirm asymmetric CSM interaction as the energy source.
Abstract
Some core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) are too luminous and radiate too much total energy to be powered by the release of thermal energy from the ejecta and radioactive-decay energy from the synthesised Ni/Co. A source of additional power is the interaction between the supernova (SN) ejecta and a massive circumstellar material (CSM). This is an important power source in Type IIn SNe, which show narrow spectral lines arising from the unshocked CSM, but not all interacting SNe show such narrow lines. We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of the hydrogen-rich SN 2021irp, which is both luminous, with mag, and long-lived, remaining brighter than mag for 250 d. We show that an additional energy source is required to power such a SN, and determine the nature of the source. We also investigate the properties of the pre-existing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
