A real-time search for Type Ia Supernovae with late-time CSM interaction in ZTF
Jacco H. Terwel, Kate Maguire, Se\'an J. Brennan, Llu\'is Galbany, Simeon Reusch, Steve Schulze, Niilo Koivisto, Tapio Pursimo, Samuel Grund S{\o}rensen, Mar\'ia Alejandra D\'iaz Teodori, Astrid Guldberg Theil, Mikael Turkki, Tom\'as E. M\"uller-Bravo, Umut Burgaz, Young-Lo Kim

TL;DR
This paper reports on a real-time survey of Type Ia supernovae using ZTF, discovering late-time rebrightening events that reveal ongoing circumstellar interaction and provide insights into progenitor systems.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic real-time monitoring program for late-time CSM interaction in SNe Ia, utilizing ZTF data to detect and analyze rebrightening events.
Findings
Discovered a ~50 day rebrightening in SN 2020qxz around 1200 days post-peak.
Spectroscopy revealed emission lines consistent with CSM interaction fading after rebrightening.
Demonstrated the importance of large sky surveys for catching late-time supernova phenomena.
Abstract
The nature of Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) progenitor systems and the mechanisms that lead up to their explosions are still widely debated. In rare cases the SN ejecta interact with circumstellar material (CSM) that was ejected from the progenitor system prior to the SN. The unknown distance between the CSM and SN explosion site makes it impossible to predict when the interaction will start. If the time between the SN and start of CSM interaction is of the order of months to years the SN has generally faded and is not actively followed up anymore, making it even more difficult to detect the interaction while it happens. Here we report on a real-time monitoring program which ran between 13-11-2023 and 09-07-2024, monitoring 6914 SNe Ia for signs of late-time rebrightening using the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). Flagged candidates were rapidly followed up with photometry and spectroscopy…
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