2 research outputs found
Evidence for Extended Hydrogen-Poor CSM in the Three-Peaked Light Curve of Stripped Envelope Ib Supernova
We present multi-band ATLAS photometry for SN 2019tsf, a stripped-envelope
Type Ib supernova (SESN). The SN shows a triple-peaked light curve and a late
(re-)brightening, making it unique among stripped-envelope systems. The
re-brightening observations represent the latest photometric measurements of a
multi-peaked Type Ib SN to date. As late-time photometry and spectroscopy
suggest no hydrogen, the potential circumstellar material (CSM) must be H-poor.
Moreover, late (>150 days) spectra show no signs of narrow emission lines,
further disfavouring CSM interaction. On the contrary, an extended CSM
structure is seen through a follow-up radio campaign with Karl G. Jansky Very
Large Array (VLA), indicating a source of bright optically thick radio emission
at late times, which is highly unusual among H-poor SESNe. We attribute this
phenomenology to an interaction of the supernova ejecta with
spherically-asymmetric CSM, potentially disk-like, and we present several
models that can potentially explain the origin of this rare Type Ib supernova.
The warped disc model paints a novel picture, where the tertiary companion
perturbs the progenitors CSM, that can explain the multi-peaked light curves of
SNe, and here we apply it to SN 2019tsf. This SN 2019tsf is likely a member of
a new sub-class of Type Ib SNe and among the recently discovered class of SNe
that undergo mass transfer at the moment of explosionComment: 23 pages, Comments are welcome, Submitted to Ap