SN 2024cld: unveiling the complex mass-loss histories of evolved supergiant progenitors to core collapse supernovae
T. L. Killestein, M. Pursiainen, R. Kotak, P. Charalampopoulos, J. Lyman, K. Ackley, S. Belkin, D. L. Coppejans, B. Davies, M. J. Dyer, L. Galbany, B. Godson, D. Jarvis, N. Koivisto, A. Kumar, M. Magee, M. Mitchell, D. O'Neill, A. Sahu, B. Warwick, R. P. Breton, T. Butterley

TL;DR
SN 2024cld, a transitional core-collapse supernova, exhibits complex, long-lasting interaction with circumstellar material revealing the chaotic mass-loss history of its evolved supergiant progenitor.
Contribution
This study provides detailed multi-epoch observations of SN 2024cld, unveiling a multi-component CSM structure and linking it to the progenitor's mass-loss episodes and binary interactions.
Findings
Revealed a multi-component CSM structure including a dense envelope, disk, and wind.
Observed a rotating photosphere with polarimetric evolution.
Identified signatures of pre-shock circumstellar material.
Abstract
Pre-explosion mass loss in supernova (SN) progenitors is a crucial unknown factor in stellar evolution, yet has been illuminated recently by the diverse zoo of interacting transients. We present SN2024cld, a transitional core-collapse SN at a distance of 39 Mpc, straddling the boundary between SN II and SN IIn, showing persistent interaction with circumstellar material (CSM) similar to H-rich SN1998S and PTF11iqb. The SN was discovered and classified just 12h post-explosion via the GOTO-FAST high-cadence program. Optical spectroscopy, photometry, and polarimetry over 220d chart the complex, long-lived interaction in this transient. Early evolution is dominated by CSM interaction, showing a 14d rise to a peak absolute magnitude of g=-17.6 mag, with clear flash-ionisation signatures. SN2024cld also shows a slowly-evolving late time light curve powered by CSM interaction, with…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
