LSQ14bdq: A Type Ic super-luminous supernova with a double-peaked light curve
Author
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Nicholl, M.
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Smartt, S. J.
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Jerkstrand, A.
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Sim, S. A.
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Inserra, C.
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Anderson, J. P.
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Baltay, C.
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Benetti, S.
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Chambers, K.
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Chen, T. W.
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Elias Rosa, N.
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Feindt, U.
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Flewelling, H. A.
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Fraser, M.
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Gal Yam, Avishay
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Galbany, Lluis
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Huber, M. E.
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Kangas, T.
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Kankare, E.
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Kotak, R.
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Kruehler, T.
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Maguire, K.
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McKinnon, R.
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Rabinowitz, D.
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Rostami, S.
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Schulze, Steve
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Smith, K.W.
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Sullivan, M.
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Tonry, J. L.
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Valenti, S.
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Young, D. R.
Admission date
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2015-10-01T20:19:55Z
Available date
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2015-10-01T20:19:55Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Astrophysical Journal Letters Volumen: 807 Número: 1 Número de artículo: L18
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Identifier
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DOI: 10.1088/2041-8205/807/1/L18
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/134045
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Abstract
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We present data for LSQ14bdq, a hydrogen-poor super-luminous supernova (SLSN) discovered by the La Silla QUEST survey and classified by the Public ESO Spectroscopic Survey of Transient Objects. The spectrum and light curve are very similar to slow-declining SLSNe such as PTF12dam. However, detections within similar to 1 day after explosion show a bright and relatively fast initial peak, lasting for similar to 15 days, prior to the usual slow rise to maximum light. The broader, main peak can be fit with either central engine or circumstellar interaction models. We discuss the implications of the precursor peak in the context of these models. It is too bright and narrow to be explained as a normal Ni-56-powered SN, and we suggest that interaction models may struggle to fit the two peaks simultaneously. We propose that the initial peak may arise from the post-shock cooling of extended stellar material, and reheating by a central engine drives the second peak. In this picture, we show that an explosion energy of similar to 2 X 10(52) erg and a progenitor radius of a few hundred solar radii would be required to power the early emission. The competing engine models involve rapidly spinning magnetars (neutron stars) or fallback onto a central black hole. The prompt energy required may favor the black hole scenario. The bright initial peak may be difficult to reconcile with a compact Wolf-Rayet star as a progenitor since the inferred energies and ejected masses become unphysical.
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Patrocinador
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DFG
HA 1850/28-1
NASA
NNX12AR65G
NNX14AM74G
EU/FP7-ERC grants
291222
307260
320360
FP7 grant
267251
CONICYT-Chile FONDECYT grants
3140566
3140534
Basal-CATA PFB-06/2007
Millennium Science Initiative grant
IC120009