SIMBAD references

2020MNRAS.497.3542P - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 497, 3542-3556 (2020/September-3)

PTF11rka: an interacting supernova at the crossroads of stripped-envelope and H-poor superluminous stellar core collapses.

PIAN E., MAZZALI P.A., MORIYA T.J., RUBIN A., GAL-YAM A., ARCAVI I., BEN-AMI S., BLAGORODNOVA N., BUFANO F., FILIPPENKO A.V., KASLIWAL M., KULKARNI S.R., LUNNAN R., MANULIS I., MATHESON T., NUGENT P.E., OFEK E., PERLEY D.A., PRENTICE S.J. and YARON O.

Abstract (from CDS):

The hydrogen-poor supernova (SN) PTF11rka (z = 0.0744), reported by the Palomar Transient Factory, was observed with various telescopes starting a few days after the estimated explosion time of 2011 December 5 UT and up to 432 rest-frame days thereafter. The rising part of the light curve was monitored only in the RPTF filter band, and maximum in this band was reached ∼30 rest-frame days after the estimated explosion time. The light curve and spectra of PTF11rka are consistent with the core-collapse explosion of a ∼10 M carbon-oxygen core evolved from a progenitor of main-sequence mass 25-40 M, that liberated a kinetic energy Ek≃4 x 1051 erg, expelled ∼8 M of ejecta, and synthesized ∼0.5 M of 56Ni. The photospheric spectra of PTF11rka are characterized by narrow absorption lines that point to suppression of the highest ejecta velocities (>= 15 000 km s–1). This would be expected if the ejecta impacted a dense, clumpy circumstellar medium. This in turn caused them to lose a fraction of their energy (∼5 x 1050 erg), less than 2 per cent of which was converted into radiation that sustained the light curve before maximum brightness. This is reminiscent of the superluminous SN 2007bi, the light-curve shape and spectra of which are very similar to those of PTF11rka, although the latter is a factor of 10 less luminous and evolves faster in time. PTF11rka is in fact more similar to gamma-ray burst SNe in luminosity, although it has a lower energy and a lower Ek/Mej ratio.

Abstract Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): radiative transfer - stars: massive - galaxies: star formation - transients: supernovae

Simbad objects: 7

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