Early-time light curves of Type Ib/c supernovae from the SDSS-II Supernova Survey
Author
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Taddia, F.
Author
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Sollerman, J.
Author
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Leloudas, G.
Author
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Stritzinger, M. D.
Author
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Valenti, S.
Author
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Galbany, Lluis
Author
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Kessler, R.
Author
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Schneider, D. P.
Author
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Wheeler, J. C.
Admission date
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2015-08-07T18:51:28Z
Available date
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2015-08-07T18:51:28Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Astronomy & Astrophysics 574, A60 (2015)
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201423915
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132504
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Context. Type Ib/c supernovae (SNe Ib/c) have been investigated in several single-object studies; however, there is still a paucity of
works concerning larger, homogeneous samples of these hydrogen-poor transients, in particular regarding the premaximum phase of
their light curves.
Aims. In this paper we present and analyze the early-time optical light curves (LCs, ugriz) of 20 SNe Ib/c from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) SN survey II, aiming to study their observational and physical properties, as well as to derive their progenitor
parameters.
Methods. High-cadence, multiband LCs are fitted with a functional model and the best-fit parameters are compared among the SN
types. Bolometric LCs (BLCs) are constructed for the entire sample. We also computed the black-body (BB) temperature (TBB) and
photospheric radius (Rph) evolution for each SN via BB fits on the spectral energy distributions. In addition, the bolometric properties
are compared to both hydrodynamical and analytical model expectations.
Results. Complementing our sample with literature data, we find that SNe Ic and Ic-BL (broad-line) have shorter rise times than those
of SNe Ib and IIb. The decline rate parameter, Δm15, is similar among the different subtypes. SNe Ic appear brighter and bluer than
SNe Ib, but this difference vanishes if we consider host galaxy extinction corrections based on colors. Templates for SN Ib/c LCs are
presented. Our SNe have typical TBB of ∼10 000 K at the peak and Rph of ∼1015 cm. Analysis of the BLCs of SNe Ib and Ic gives
typical ejecta masses Mej ≈ 3.6−5.7 M , energies EK ≈ 1.5−1.7×1051 erg, and M(56Ni) ≈ 0.3 M . Higher values for EK and M(56Ni)
are estimated for SNe Ic-BL (Mej ≈ 5.4 M , EK ≈ 10.7×1051 erg, M(56Ni) ≈ 1.1 M ). For the majority of SNe Ic and Ic-BL, we can
put strong limits (<2−4 days) on the duration of the expected early-time plateau. Less stringent limits can be placed on the duration of
the plateau for the sample of SNe Ib. In the single case of SN Ib 2006lc, a >5.9 days plateau seems to be detected. The rising part of
the BLCs is reproduced by power laws with index <2. For two events (SN 2005hm and SN 2007qx), we find signatures of a possible
shock break-out cooling tail.
Conclusions. Based on the limits for the plateau length and on the slow rise of the BLCs, we find that in most of our SNe Ic and
Ic-BL the 56Ni is mixed out to the outer layers, suggesting that SN Ic progenitors are de facto helium poor. The derived progenitor
parameters (56Ni, EK, Mej) are consistent with previous works.