Characterization of type Ibn SNe
D. Farias, C. Gall, V. A. Villar, K. Auchettl, K. M. de Soto, A. Gagliano, W. B. Hoogendam, G. Narayan, A. Sedgewick, S. K. Yadavalli, Y. Zenati, C. R. Angus, K. W. Davis, J. Hjorth, W. V. Jacobson-Gal\'an, D. O. Jones, C. D. Kilpatrick, M. J. Bustamante Rosell, D. A. Coulter

TL;DR
This study compiles and analyzes the largest sample of 61 Type Ibn supernovae, revealing diverse light curves, low-energy explosions, and progenitor characteristics suggesting binary systems rather than massive single stars.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive statistical analysis of SNe Ibn, correlating spectral features with light curve properties and inferring progenitor system characteristics.
Findings
SNe Ibn have diverse light curves with peak magnitudes around -19.4 mag.
Most SNe Ibn result from low-energy explosions of stars with ~0.1 M_sun of helium-rich CSM.
Progenitors are likely binary systems with stars around 10 M_sun.
Abstract
Type Ibn supernovae (SNe) are characterized by narrow helium (He I) lines from photons produced by the unshocked circumstellar material (CSM). About 80 SNe Ibn have been discovered to date, and only a handful have extensive observational records. Thus, many open questions regarding the progenitor system and the origin of the CSM remain. Here we investigate potential correlations between the spectral features of the prominent He I 5876 line and the optical and X-ray light curve properties of SNe Ibn. We compile the largest sample of 61 SNe Ibn to date, of which 24 SNe have photometric and spectroscopic data from the Young Supernova Experiment and 37 SNe have archival data sets. We fit 24 SNe Ibn with sufficient photometric coverage ( to bands) using semi-analytical models from MOSFiT. We demonstrate that the light curves of SNe Ibn are more diverse than previous analyses…
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