Modeling the Light Curve and Spectra of SN 2023aew
Rachid Ouyed (Department of Physics, Astronomy, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada)

TL;DR
This paper models the light curve and spectra of SN 2023aew by proposing a delayed neutron star conversion into a quark or hybrid star, explaining observed features and linking superluminous supernovae with luminous fast blue transients.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model involving delayed NS conversion to HS or QS to explain SN 2023aew's features, connecting magnetar evolution with diverse transient phenomena.
Findings
Delayed NS conversion injects ~2e49 erg into SN ejecta.
The model reproduces the observed light curve and spectral features.
It suggests a connection between SLSNe and LFBOTs through this mechanism.
Abstract
We propose that the delayed conversion of a neutron star (NS) into either a quark star (QS) or a hybrid star (HS), occurring approximately 105-109 days after the supernova (SN) explosion, injects ~ 2e49 erg of thermal energy into the expanded SN ejecta. This energy, delivered over ~ 40 days via a quark-nova (QN) shock or the spin-down power of the HS, can reproduce the photometric and spectral features observed in SN 2023aew. In this model, the first light curve peak corresponds to the 56Ni-powered SN resulting from a stripped-envelope progenitor with a zero-age main sequence mass of at least ~ (15-16)M_sun. The plateau between the two peaks may result from interaction between the SN ejecta and circumstellar material (CSM). Alternatively, it could be explained by the spin-down power of the NS prior to its conversion into a highly magnetized HS, which is responsible for powering the…
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