SN 2011hs: a fast and faint Type IIb supernova from a supergiant progenitor
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2014Metadata
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Bufano, Filomena
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SN 2011hs: a fast and faint Type IIb supernova from a supergiant progenitor
Author
- Bufano, Filomena;
- Pignata Libralato, Giuliano;
- Bersten, M.;
- Mazzali, Paolo;
- Ryder, S. D.;
- Margutti, R.;
- Milisavljevic, D.;
- Morelli, L.;
- Benetti, S.;
- Cappellaro, E.;
- González Gaitán, E.;
- Romero Canizales, C.;
- Stritzinger, M.;
- Walker, E. S.;
- Anderson, J. P.;
- Contreras, C.;
- De Jaeger, Thomas;
- Forster, Francisco;
- Gutiérrez, Claudia P.;
- Hamuy Wackenhut, Mario;
- Hsiao, Eric;
- Morrell, N.;
- Olivares, F.;
- Paillas, E.;
- Parker, S.;
- Pian, E.;
- Pickering, T. E.;
- Sanders, N.;
- Stockdale, C.;
- Turatto, M.;
- Valenti, S.;
- Fesen, R. A.;
- Maza Sancho, José;
- Nomoto, K.;
- Phillips, M. M.;
- Soderberg, A.;
Abstract
Observations spanning a large wavelength range, from X-ray to radio, of the Type IIb supernova (SN) 2011hs are presented, covering its evolution during the first year after explosion. The optical light curve presents a narrower shape and a fainter luminosity at peak than previously observed for Type IIb SNe. High expansion velocities are measured from the broad absorption H I and He I lines. From the comparison of the bolometric light curve and the time evolution of the photospheric velocities with hydrodynamical models, we found that SN 2011hs is consistent with the explosion of a 3–4 M⊙ He-core progenitor star, corresponding to a main-sequence mass of 12–15 M⊙, that ejected a mass of 56Ni of about 0.04 M⊙, with an energy of E = 8.5 × 1050 ERG. Such a low-mass progenitor scenario is in full agreement with the modelling of the nebular spectrum taken at ∼215 d from maximum. From the modelling of the adiabatic cooling phase, we infer a progenitor radius of ≈500–600 R⊙, clearly pointing to an extended progenitor star. The radio light curve of SN 2011hs yields a peak luminosity similar to that of SN 1993J, but with a higher mass-loss rate and a wind density possibly more similar to that of SN 2001ig. Although no significant deviations from a smooth decline have been found in the radio light curves, we cannot rule out the presence of a binary companion star.
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Artículo de publicación ISI.
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MNRAS 439, 1807–1828 (2014)
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