SN 2021aaev: a Hydrogen-Rich Superluminous Supernova with Early Flash and Long-Lived Circumstellar Interaction in an Unusual Host Environment
Yang Hu, Ragnhild Lunnan, Priscila J. Pessi, Alberto Saldana-Lopez, Anders Jerkstrand, Jesper Sollerman, Steve Schulze, Joseph P. Anderson, Se\'an J. Brennan, Stefano P. Cosentino, Anjasha Gangopadhyay, Anamaria Gkini, Mariusz Gromadzki, Matthew J. Hayes, Cosimo Inserra

TL;DR
SN 2021aaev is a hydrogen-rich superluminous supernova with early flash features and prolonged circumstellar interaction, occurring in an unusual host environment, challenging typical supernova classifications and models.
Contribution
This study provides detailed observations of SN 2021aaev, revealing its unique prolonged flash-ionization phase and host environment, offering new insights into superluminous supernovae with dense circumstellar media.
Findings
Persistent narrow Balmer lines for at least 100 days
Peak absolute magnitude of -21.46 in the ATLAS o band
Host galaxy features a quiescent red substructure
Abstract
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN\,2021aaev, a hydrogen-rich, superluminous supernova with persistent (at least days) narrow Balmer lines (SLSN-IIn) at redshift . We observed SN\,2021aaev to rise in days since first light and reach a peak absolute magnitude of in the ATLAS band. The pre-peak spectra resemble those of typical SNe IIn with flash-ionization features arising from the interaction with a dense, confined circumstellar medium (CSM), albeit the flash timescale is longer than usual ( days). Post peak, the narrow emission lines evolve slowly, and the absence of ejecta features indicates strong deceleration by the CSM. The total radiated energy (about ~ergs) is possible with a low-mass (1--) ejecta ploughing into a massive (9--), extended (outer…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
