Exploring the Energy Sources Powering the Light Curve of the Type Ibn Supernova PS15dpn and the Mass-Loss History of the SN Progenitor

Abstract

PS15dpn is a luminous rapidly rising Type Ibn supernova (SN) discovered by Pan-STARRS1 (PS1). Previous study showed that its bolometric light curve (LC) cannot be explained by the 56Ni model. In this paper, we used the 56Ni model, the magnetar model, the circumstellar interaction (CSI) model, and the CSI plus 56Ni model to fit the bolometric LC of PS15dpn. We found that the 56Ni model can fit the bolometric LC but the parameters are unrealistic, and that the magnetar model, the CSI model, and the CSI plus 56Ni model can match the data with reasonable parameters. Considering the facts that the emission lines indicative of the interaction between the ejecta and the CSM have been confirmed, and that the SNe produced by the explosions of massive stars can synthesize moderate amount of 56Ni, we suggest that the CSI plus 56Ni model is the most promising. Assuming that the CSM is a shell (wind), the masses of the ejecta, the CSM, and the 56Ni are 15.79-4.77+5.44 M (14.18-1.64+1.81 M), 0.84-0.10+0.13 M (0.88-0.12+0.11 M), and 0.32-0.11+0.11 M (0.16-0.08+0.13 M), respectively. The inferred ejecta masses are consistent with the scenario that the progenitors of SNe Ibn are massive Wolf-Rayet stars. Adopting the shell CSM scenario, the shell might be expelled by an eruption of the progenitor just 17-167 days prior to the SN explosion; for the wind scenario, the inferred mass-loss rate of the wind is 8.0 M yr-1, indicating that the wind is a "super-wind" having extreme high mass-loss rate.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…