SN 2015bn: a detailed multi-wavelength view of a nearbysuperluminous supernova
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2016Metadata
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Nicholl, M.
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SN 2015bn: a detailed multi-wavelength view of a nearbysuperluminous supernova
Author
- Nicholl, M.;
- Berger, E.;
- Smartt, S. J.;
- Margutti, R.;
- Kamble, A.;
- Alexander, K. D.;
- Chen, T. W.;
- Inserra, C.;
- Arcavi, I.;
- Blanchard, P. K.;
- Cartier Ugarte, Regis;
- Chambers, K. C.;
- Childress, M. J.;
- Chornock, R.;
- Cowperthwaite, P. S.;
- Drout, M.;
- Flewelling, H. A.;
- Fraser, M.;
- Gal Yam, Avishay;
- Galbany, Lluis;
- Harmanen, J.;
- Holohien, T- W. -S;
- Hosseinzadeh, G.;
- Howell, D. A.;
- Huber, M. E.;
- Jerkstrand, A.;
- Kankare, E.;
- Kochanek, C. S. C. S.;
- Lin, Z. -Y.;
- Lunnan, R.;
- Magnier, E. A.;
- Maguire, K.;
- McCully, C.;
- McDonald, M.;
- Metzger, B. D.;
- Milisavljevic, D.;
- Mitra, A.;
- Reynolds, T.;
- Saario, J.;
- Shappee, B. J.;
- Smith, K. W.;
- Valenti, S.;
- Villar, V. A.;
- Waters, C.;
- Young, D. R.;
Abstract
We present observations of SN 2015bn (=PS15ae = CSS141223-113342+004332 = MLS150211-113342+004333), a Type I superluminous supernova (SLSN) at redshift z = 0.1136. As well as being one of the closest SLSNe I yet discovered, it is intrinsically brighter (M-U approximate to -23.1) and in a fainter galaxy (M-B approximate to -16.0) than other SLSNe at z similar to 0.1. We used this opportunity to collect the most extensive data set for any SLSN I to date, including densely sampled spectroscopy and photometry, from the UV to the NIR, spanning -50 to +250 days from optical maximum. SN 2015bn fades slowly, but exhibits surprising undulations in the light curve on a timescale of 30-50 days, especially in the UV. The spectrum shows extraordinarily slow evolution except for a rapid transformation between +7 and +20-30 days. No narrow emission lines from slow-moving material are observed at any phase. We derive physical properties including the bolometric luminosity, and find slow velocity evolution and non-monotonic temperature and radial evolution. A deep radio limit rules out a healthy off-axis gamma-ray burst, and places constraints on the pre-explosion mass loss. The data can be consistently explained by a greater than or similar to 10 M-circle dot stripped progenitor exploding with similar to 10(51) erg kinetic energy, forming a magnetar with a spin-down timescale of similar to 20 days (thus avoiding a gamma-ray burst) that reheats the ejecta and drives ionization fronts. The most likely alternative scenario-interaction with similar to 20 M-circle dot of dense, inhomogeneous circumstellar material-can be tested with continuing radio follow-up.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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The Astrophysical Journal, 826:39 (31pp), 2016 July 20
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