SN 2019tsf Evidence for Extended Hydrogen-poor CSM in the Three-peaked Light Curve of Stripped Envelope of a Type Ib Supernova

Open Access
Authors
  • Yossef Zenati
  • Qinan Wang
  • Alexey Bobrick
  • Lindsay DeMarchi
  • Hila Glanz
  • Mor Rozner
  • Jacob E. Jencson
  • Armin Rest
  • Brian D. Metzger
  • Raffaella Margutti
  • Sebastian Gomez
  • Nathan Smith
  • Silvia Toonen
  • Joe S. Bright
  • Colin Norman
  • Ryan J. Foley
  • Alexander Gagliano
  • Julian H. Krolik
  • Stephen J. Smartt
  • Ashley V. Villar
  • Gautham Narayan
  • Ori Fox
  • Katie Auchettl
  • Daniel Brethauer
  • Alejandro Clocchiatti
  • Sophie V. Coelln
  • Deanne L. Coppejans
  • Georgios Dimitriadis
  • Andris Dorozsmai
  • Maria Drout
  • Wynn Jacobson-Galan
  • Bore Gao
  • Ryan Ridden-Harper
  • Charles Donald Kilpatrick
  • Tanmoy Laskar
  • David Matthews
  • Sofia Rest
  • Ken W. Smith
  • Candice McKenzie Stauffer
  • Michael C. Stroh
  • Louis-Gregory Strolger
  • Giacomo Terreran
  • Justin D.R. Pierel
  • Anthony L. Piro
Publication date 10-10-2025
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 9
Volume | Issue number 992 | 1
Number of pages 19
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present multiband ATLAS and ZTF photometry for SN 2019tsf, a Type Ib stripped-envelope supernova (SESN). The slow spectral evolution could be associated with an uncommon explosion mechanism specific to this SN. Possible explanations include fallback accretion onto a compact remnant or a long-lived central engine, both of which could provide extended energy injection responsible for the late-time rebrightening and unusual spectral features. The rebrightening observations represent the latest photometric measurements of a multipeaked Type Ib SN. As late-time photometry and spectroscopy suggest no hydrogen, the potential circumstellar material (CSM) must be H-poor. The absence of a nebular phase and the lack of narrow emission lines in the late-time spectra (>142 days) of the SNe suggest that any CSM interaction is likely asymmetric and enveloped by the SN ejecta. However, an extended CSM structure is evident through a follow-up radio campaign with the 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 asymmetric CSM, potentially disk-like, and we present several models that may explain the origin of this rare Type Ib supernova. We propose a warped disk model in which a tertiary companion—commonly present around massive stars—perturbs the progenitor’s CSM, producing density enhancements that may explain the observed multipeaked SN 2019tsf light curve. This SN 2019tsf is a unique SN Type Ib among the recently discovered class of SNe that undergo mass transfer at the moment of explosion.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/adf6b1
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105017781225
Downloads
SN 2019tsf (Final published version)
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