2019ApJ...887....4D


Query : 2019ApJ...887....4D

2019ApJ...887....4D - Astrophys. J., 887, 4-4 (2019/December-2)

Carnegie Supernova Project-II: near-infrared spectroscopic diversity of Type II supernovae.

DAVIS S., HSIAO E.Y., ASHALL C., HOEFLICH P., PHILLIPS M.M., MARION G.H., KIRSHNER R.P., MORRELL N., SAND D.J., BURNS C., CONTRERAS C., STRITZINGER M., ANDERSON J.P., BARON E., DIAMOND T., GUTIERREZ C.P., HAMUY M., HOLMBO S., KASLIWAL M.M., KRISCIUNAS K., KUMAR S., LU J., PESSI P.J., PIRO A.L., PRIETO J.L., SHAHBANDEH M. and SUNTZEFF N.B.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present 81 near-infrared (NIR) spectra of 30 Type II supernovae (SNe II) from the Carnegie Supernova Project-II (CSP-II), the largest such data set published to date. We identify a number of NIR features and characterize their evolution over time. The NIR spectroscopic properties of SNe II fall into two distinct groups. This classification is first based on the strength of the He I λ1.083 µm absorption during the plateau phase; SNe II are either significantly above (spectroscopically strong) or below 50 Å (spectroscopically weak) in pseudo equivalent width. However, between the two groups other properties, such as the timing of CO formation and the presence of Sr II, are also observed. Most surprisingly, the distinct weak and strong NIR spectroscopic classes correspond to SNe II with slow and fast declining light curves, respectively. These two photometric groups match the modern nomenclature of SNe IIP, which show a long duration plateau, and IIL, which have a linear declining light curve. Including NIR spectra previously published, 18 out of 19 SNe II follow this slow declining-spectroscopically weak and fast declining-spectroscopically strong correspondence. This is in apparent contradiction to the recent findings in the optical that slow and fast decliners show a continuous distribution of properties. The weak SNe II show a high-velocity component of helium that may be caused by a thermal excitation from a reverse shock created by the outer ejecta interacting with the red supergiant wind, but the origin of the observed dichotomy is not understood. Further studies are crucial in determining whether the apparent differences in the NIR are due to distinct physical processes or a gap in the current data set.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Core-collapse supernovae - Near infrared astronomy - Spectroscopy

CDS comments: KISS14J is SN 2014U in SIMBAD, and CATA13A is SN 2013hf in SIMBAD.

Simbad objects: 73

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Number of rows : 73
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 LSQ 12dcl SN* 00 13 43.34 -00 27 58.4           SNII 2 0
2 LEDA 1142807 EmG 00 13 43.8138786288 -00 27 35.643122136   16.38   15.25   ~ 10 0
3 SN 2014cx SN* 00 59 47.83 -07 34 18.6           SNIIP 39 1
4 NGC 337 EmG 00 59 50.090 -07 34 40.66 11.97 12.06 11.61 12.4 12.2 ~ 278 1
5 M 74 G 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ 1741 1
6 SN 2013ej SN* 01 36 48.16 +15 45 31.0           SNIIP 202 0
7 LEDA 1265294 GiG 01 46 38.246 +04 13 33.34           ~ 9 0
8 SN 2013gu SN* 01 46 38.27 +04 13 24.4           SNIIP 5 1
9 SN 2017gmr SN* 02 35 30.15 -09 21 15.0           SNII 38 0
10 LEDA 1145363 EmG 03 10 49.3536637872 -00 21 25.567891164   16.12   14.94   ~ 8 0
11 iPTF 13dzb SN* 03 10 50.21 -00 21 40.3           SNII 4 0
12 MCG-01-10-039 EmG 03 49 05.4869956920 -03 03 37.692668916   15   13.31   ~ 26 0
13 SN 2013gd SN* 03 49 05.64 -03 03 28.3           SNIIP 7 1
14 SN 1997D SN* 04 11 01.00 -56 29 56.0       16.3   SNIIpec 175 1
15 SN 2016ija SN* 04 12 07.640 -32 51 10.57           SNII 19 0
16 SN 2009ib SN* 04 17 40.09 -62 46 40.3           SNIIP 54 1
17 SN 1999em SN* 04 41 27.04 -02 51 45.2   13.79 13.7     SNIIP 676 1
18 NAME LMC G 05 23 34.6 -69 45 22     0.4     ~ 17478 0
19 SN 1987A SN* 05 35 28.020 -69 16 11.07           SNIIpec 4945 2
20 SN 2013ai SN* 06 16 18.35 -21 22 32.9           SNII 21 1
21 NGC 2207 AG? 06 16 22.0336889136 -21 22 21.759218400   11.48 10.65 10.21 11.9 ~ 289 3
22 SN 2013hf SN* 06 25 10.07 -37 20 41.3           SNII 2 1
23 ESO 365-16 G 06 25 10.4786541216 -37 20 24.323359884   15.10 15.05 13.83   ~ 16 0
24 SN 2013hj SN* 09 12 06.29 -15 25 46.0           SNII 13 1
25 MCG-02-24-003 AG? 09 12 06.5 -15 25 53   14       ~ 16 0
26 SN 2012hs SN* 09 49 14.71 -47 54 45.6           SNII 3 1
27 ESO 213-2 AG? 09 49 16.5155753208 -47 55 12.397519308   13.0   13.0 12.4 ~ 23 0
28 ASASSN -15jp SN* 10 11 38.990 -31 39 04.04     15.6     SNII 5 0
29 NGC 3157 EmG 10 11 42.422 -31 38 34.17   13.94   13.5 13.1 ~ 52 0
30 NGC 3239 AG? 10 25 04.867 +17 09 49.21   13.5       ~ 184 0
31 SN 2012A SN* 10 25 07.39 +17 09 14.6           SNIIP 115 0
32 SN 2012aw SN* 10 43 53.735 +11 40 17.63       15   SNIIP 205 1
33 M 95 GiP 10 43 57.7313485800 +11 42 13.301191332 10.71 10.51 9.73 9.48   ~ 1124 2
34 SN 2009md SN* 10 48 26.28 +12 32 02.8           SNIIP 66 2
35 LSQ 15ok SN* 10 49 16.68 -19 38 26.0           SNII 4 0
36 ESO 569-12 Sy1 10 49 16.7371491408 -19 38 12.665226264   13.53   12.28 12.9 ~ 41 0
37 Mrk 1270 Sy1 10 55 49.1922977736 -09 51 36.126291168   14.7   14.5 14.4 ~ 31 0
38 SN 2013ht SN* 10 55 50.95 -09 51 42.4           SNII 2 1
39 LSQ 13dpa SN* 11 01 12.91 -05 50 52.5           SNII 13 0
40 SN 2014dw SN* 11 10 48.41 -37 27 02.2           SNII 12 1
41 NGC 3568 Sy1 11 10 48.5525122964 -37 26 51.850678068   13.01 12.58 11.61 12.5 ~ 81 0
42 SN 2014U SN* 11 44 52.16 +19 27 17.8           SNII 3 1
43 NGC 3859 H2G 11 44 52.2245400768 +19 27 15.258918744   14.9   13.80   ~ 97 0
44 SN 2008in SN* 12 22 01.77 +04 28 47.5           SNIIP 101 1
45 SN 2009N SN* 12 31 09.46 -08 02 56.3           SNIIP 94 1
46 SDSS J125258.03+322444.5 G 12 52 58.033 +32 24 44.28           ~ 9 0
47 ASASSN -13dn SN* 12 52 58.20 +32 25 09.3           SNII 4 0
48 ESO 381-48 EmG 13 01 05.55 -36 36 02.4   15.02 15.21 14.10 14.53 ~ 22 0
49 ASASSN -15bb SN* 13 01 06.380 -36 36 00.17           SNII 5 0
50 NGC 5054 Sy1 13 16 58.488 -16 38 05.46   11.3   10.36 10.7 ~ 196 1
51 SN 2014A SN* 13 16 59.36 -16 37 57.0           SNIIP 10 1
52 SN 2005cs SN* 13 29 53.37 +47 10 28.2   14.5       SNIIP 408 1
53 NGC 5227 Sy2 13 35 24.5500134480 +01 24 38.076433380   17.16 16.45     ~ 52 0
54 ASASSN -15fz SN* 13 35 25.14 +01 24 33.0     16.9     SNII 5 0
55 LSQ 12bri SN* 13 35 48.34 -21 23 53.5           SNII 3 0
56 NGC 5669 H2G 14 32 43.476 +09 53 25.47   13.2       ~ 198 0
57 SN 2013ab SN* 14 32 44.49 +09 53 12.3           SNIIP 60 1
58 SN 2013by SN* 16 59 02.43 -60 11 41.8           SNII 64 1
59 ESO 138-10 GiG 16 59 02.952 -60 12 57.67   11.57   10.52 10.7 ~ 68 0
60 ASASSN -15oz SN* 19 19 33.49 -33 46 02.0           SNII 17 0
61 SN 2017eaw SN* 20 34 44.238 +60 11 36.00           SNIIP 116 0
62 SN 2002hh SN* 20 34 44.29 +60 07 19.0     17.18     SNIIP 152 1
63 SN 2004et SN* 20 35 25.33 +60 07 17.7   12.88       SNIIP 489 1
64 SN 2014bt SN* 21 43 11.13 -38 58 05.8           SNIb/c 4 1
65 IC 5128 Sy2 21 43 11.7631871112 -38 58 05.455401384   14.06   12.62   ~ 28 0
66 LEDA 68414 G 22 15 26.1 -10 28 41           ~ 7 0
67 SN 2014cw SN* 22 15 26.55 -10 28 34.6           SNII 8 1
68 SN 2014dq SN* 22 23 16.120 -28 58 30.78           SNIIP 13 1
69 ESO 467-51 GiP 22 23.3 -28 59   14.53   13.83   ~ 51 0
70 NGC 7610 GiC 23 19 41.3871631752 +10 11 06.003153168   14.9       ~ 93 0
71 SN 2013fs SN* 23 19 44.70 +10 11 05.0           SNIIP 113 1
72 NGC 7742 GiP 23 44 15.7534099368 +10 46 01.533226872   12.5       ~ 212 0
73 SN 2014cy SN* 23 44 16.03 +10 46 12.5           SNII 16 1

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