Luminous, rapidly declining supernovae as stripped transitional objects in low metallicity environments: the case of SN 2022lxg
P. Charalampopoulos, R. Kotak, J. Sollerman, C. P. Guti\'errez, M. Pursiainen, T. L. Killestein, S. Schulze, P. J. Pessi, K. Maeda, T. Kangas, Y.-Z. Cai, C. Fremling, K. R. Hinds, T. Jegou du Laz, E. Kankare, M. M. Kasliwal, H. Kuncarayakti, P. Lundqvist, F. J. Masci, S. Mattila

TL;DR
This paper analyzes SN 2022lxg, a luminous, rapidly evolving supernova in a low-metallicity environment, revealing complex circumstellar interaction, partial stripping, and potential binary progenitor scenarios.
Contribution
It provides detailed optical and near-infrared observations of SN 2022lxg, highlighting its unique spectral evolution and proposing a binary progenitor model with partial envelope stripping.
Findings
Rapid decline in light curve implies low ejecta mass.
Spectral transition from Type IIb-like to interacting SN II features.
Evidence of asymmetry and partial hydrogen envelope retention.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the optical and near-infrared properties of SN 2022lxg, a bright ( mag) and rapidly evolving SN. It was discovered within a day of explosion, and rose to peak brightness in 10 d. Two distinct phases of circumstellar interaction are evident in the data. The first is marked by a steep blue continuum (T K) with flash-ionisation features due to hydrogen and He II. The second, weaker phase is marked by a change in the colour evolution accompanied by changes in the shapes and velocities of the spectral line profiles. Narrow P-Cygni profiles (~ km s) of He I further indicate the presence of slow-moving unshocked material and suggesting partial stripping of the progenitor. The fast decline of the light curve from peak (3.48 0.26 mag in -band) implies that the ejecta mass must be low.…
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