Early interaction signatures and an extended plateau phase in Type II SN 2020aze
Abstract
We present a photometric and spectroscopic analysis of the fast-declining Type II SN 2020aze, observed in optical bands from 2.2 to 137.4 days after explosion. The V-band light curve reaches a peak absolute magnitude of about minus 16.970.20 mag by 15 days, followed by a recombination phase with a decline rate of 2.040.13 mag per 100 days, lasting about 120 days. Early spectra (younger than 6 days) show a transient weak narrow emission line at 4687 Angstroms and a feature spanning 4400-4800 Angstroms, attributed to narrow and broad blue-shifted He II 4686, indicating interaction between the ejecta and dense circumstellar material. Comparison with spectral models suggests a red supergiant progenitor with a weak wind and a mass-loss rate of about 1e-3 solar masses per year. Semi-analytical light-curve modeling gives an initial radius of about 1100 solar radii, an ejecta mass of about 12 solar masses, an explosion energy of about 1.5e51 erg, and a progenitor mass of about 14 solar masses. These early interaction signatures, the steep decline, and the extended photospheric phase highlight the role of pre-supernova mass loss and circumstellar interaction in shaping the diversity of Type II supernovae.
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