SIMBAD references

2009ApJ...690.1313G - Astrophys. J., 690, 1313-1321 (2009/January-2)

Discovery of the ultra-bright type II-L supernova 2008es.

GEZARI S., HALPERN J.P., GRUPE D., YUAN F., QUIMBY R., McKAY T., CHAMARRO D., SISSON M.D., AKERLOF C., WHEELER J.C., BROWN P.J., CENKO S.B., RAU A., DJORDJEVIC J.O. and TERNDRUP D.M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report the discovery by the Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment (ROTSE-IIIb) telescope of SN 2008es, an overluminous supernova (SN) at z = 0.205 with a peak visual magnitude of -22.2. We present multiwavelength follow-up observations with the Swift satellite and several ground-based optical telescopes. The ROTSE-IIIb observations constrain the time of explosion to be 23±1 rest-frame days before maximum. The linear decay of the optical light curve, and the combination of a symmetric, broad Hα emission line profile with broad P Cygni Hβ and Na I λ5892 profiles, are properties reminiscent of the bright Type II-L SNe 1979C and 1980K, although SN 2008es is greater than 10 times more luminous. The host galaxy is undetected in pre-supernova Sloan Digital Sky Survey images, and similar to Type II-L SN 2005ap (the most luminous SN ever observed), the host is most likely a dwarf galaxy with Mr> - 17. Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope observations in combination with Palomar 60 inch photometry measure the spectral energy distribution of the SN from 200 to 800 nm to be a blackbody that cools from 14000 K at the time of the optical peak to 6400 K 65 days later. The inferred blackbody radius is in good agreement with the radius expected for the expansion speed measured from the broad lines (10000 km/s). The bolometric luminosity at the optical peak is 2.8x1044 erg/s, with a total energy radiated over the next 65 days of 5.6x1050 erg. The exceptional luminosity of SN 2008es requires an efficient conversion of kinetic energy produced from the core-collapse explosion into radiation. We favor a model in which the large peak luminosity is a consequence of the core collapse of a progenitor star with a low-mass extended hydrogen envelope and a stellar wind with a density close to the upper limit on the mass-loss rate measured from the lack of an X-ray detection by the Swift X-Ray Telescope.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): supernovae: general - supernovae: individual: SN 2008es - ultraviolet: ISM

Simbad objects: 11

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