SIMBAD references

2012MNRAS.424.2659M - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 424, 2659-2666 (2012/August-3)

Supernova 1998S at 14 years postmortem: continuing circumstellar interaction and dust formation.

MAUERHAN J. and SMITH N.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report late-time spectroscopic observations of the Type IIn supernova (SN) 1998S, taken 14 years after explosion using the Large Binocular Telescope. The optical spectrum exhibits strong, broad emission features of [OI], [OII] and Hα, in addition to weaker features of [OIII], Hβ and [FeII]. The last decade of evolution has exhibited a strengthening of the oxygen transitions relative to Hα, evidence that the late-time emission is powered by increasingly metal-rich SN ejecta crossing the reverse shock. The Hα luminosity of ≈ 8000 L requires that SN 1998S is still interacting with relatively dense circumstellar material (CSM), probably produced by the strong wind of a red supergiant progenitor at least ∼ 103 years before explosion. The emission lines exhibit asymmetric blueshifted profiles, which implies that the receding hemisphere of the SN is obscured by dust. The [OIII] λ5007 line, in particular, exhibits a complete suppression of its red wing. This could be the result of the expected wavelength dependence for dust extinction or a smaller radial distribution for [OIII]. In the latter case, the red wing of [OIII] could be absorbed by core dust, while both the blue and red wings are absorbed by dust within the cool dense shell between the forward and reverse shocks; this interpretation could explain why late-time [OIII] emission from SNe is often weaker than models predict. The [OI] line exhibits double-peaked structure on top of the broader underlying profile, possibly due to emission from individual clumps of ejecta or ring-like structures of metal-rich debris. The centroids of the peaks are blueshifted and lack a red counterpart. However, an archival spectrum obtained on day 1093 exhibits a third, redshifted peak, which we suspect has become extinguished by dust that formed over the last decade, after day 1093. This implies that the `missing' red components of multi-peaked oxygen profiles observed in other SNe might be obscured by varying degrees of dust extinction.

Abstract Copyright: 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2012 RAS

Journal keyword(s): supernovae: general - supernovae: individual: SN 1998S

Simbad objects: 22

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