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 (2000)
RA
ICRS (2000)
DEC
Proper motions Parallaxes Redshift Rad. vel. cz Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type Morph. type Angular size #ref
1983 - 2024
1 LSQ 12dcl Supernova 00 13 43.34 -00 27 58.4 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 2
2 LEDA 1142807 EmissionG 00 13 43.8138786288 -00 27 35.643122136 0.03144 9277 9425.5   16.38   15.25   ~ Sa 0.337 0.168 20 10
3 SN 2014cx Supernova 00 59 47.83 -07 34 18.6 0.005 1495 1499           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 40
4 NGC 337 EmissionG 00 59 50.090 -07 34 40.66 0.005526 1652.1 1656.68 11.97 12.06 11.61 12.4 12.2 ~ SB(s)d 2.88 1.78 60 276
5 M 74 Galaxy 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 0.344 -0.229 0.002197 658 658.72 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ Sc 9.33 8.71 ~ 1715
6 SN 2013ej Supernova 01 36 48.16 +15 45 31.0 0.00219 656 657.0           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 204
7 LEDA 1265294 GtowardsGroup 01 46 38.246 +04 13 33.34 0.018072 5369 5417.95           ~ ~ 0.55 0.15 179 9
8 SN 2013gu Supernova 01 46 38.27 +04 13 24.4 ~ ~ ~           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 5
9 SN 2017gmr Supernova 02 35 30.15 -09 21 15.0 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 39
10 LEDA 1145363 EmissionG 03 10 49.3536637872 -00 21 25.567891164 0.03715 10929 11136.0   16.12   14.94   ~ ~ 0.340 0.272 5 8
11 iPTF 13dzb Supernova 03 10 50.21 -00 21 40.3 0.037 10887 11092           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 4
12 MCG-01-10-039 EmissionG 03 49 05.4869956920 -03 03 37.692668916 0.0135 4030 4057   15   13.31   ~ ~ 1.320 0.290 30 26
13 SN 2013gd Supernova 03 49 05.64 -03 03 28.3 ~ ~ ~           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 8
14 SN 1997D Supernova 04 11 01.00 -56 29 56.0 ~ ~ ~       16.3   SNIIpec ~ ~ ~ ~ 177
15 SN 2016ija Supernova 04 12 07.640 -32 51 10.57 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 19
16 SN 2009ib Supernova 04 17 40.09 -62 46 40.3 0.00448 1340 1343.1           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 55
17 SN 1999em Supernova 04 41 27.04 -02 51 45.2 0.0024 719 720   13.79 13.7     SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 680
18 NAME LMC Galaxy 05 23 34.6 -69 45 22 1.910 0.229 0.000875 262.2 262.31     0.4     ~ SB(s)m 322.827 274.770 170 17267
19 SN 1987A Supernova 05 35 28.020 -69 16 11.07 0.0009 270 270           SNIIpec ~ 0.03 0.03 90 4957
20 SN 2013ai Supernova 06 16 18.35 -21 22 32.9 0.009 2686 2698           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 21
21 NGC 2207 AGN_Candidate 06 16 22.0336889136 -21 22 21.759218400 0.009292 2772.8 2785.74   11.48 10.65 10.21 11.9 ~ SAB(rs)bc ~ ~ ~ 280
22 SN 2013hf Supernova 06 25 10.07 -37 20 41.3 0.03 8859 8994           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 2
23 ESO 365-16 Galaxy 06 25 10.4786541216 -37 20 24.323359884 0.035001 10310 10493.04   15.10 15.05 13.83   ~ 2.0 0.543 0.315 140 16
24 SN 2013hj Supernova 09 12 06.29 -15 25 46.0 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 13
25 MCG-02-24-003 AGN_Candidate 09 12 06.5 -15 25 53 0.006892 2059 2066.12   14       ~ ~ 1.26 0.45 91 16
26 SN 2012hs Supernova 09 49 14.71 -47 54 45.6 0.0064 1913 1919           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 3
27 ESO 213-2 AGN_Candidate 09 49 16.5155753208 -47 55 12.397519308 0.006475 1934.8 1941.08   13.0   13.0 12.4 ~ S 0.950 0.893 25 23
28 ASASSN -15jp Supernova 10 11 38.990 -31 39 04.04 ~ ~ ~     15.6     SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 5
29 NGC 3157 EmissionG 10 11 42.422 -31 38 34.17 0.009521 2840.6 2854.19   13.94   13.5 13.1 ~ 4.5 1.527 0.397 40 52
30 NGC 3239 AGN_Candidate 10 25 04.867 +17 09 49.21 0.002522 755 755.95   13.5       ~ Im/BCD 0.707 0.523 155 177
31 SN 2012A Supernova 10 25 07.39 +17 09 14.6 0.0025 749 749           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 117
32 SN 2012aw Supernova 10 43 53.735 +11 40 17.63 0.0026 778 779       15   SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 208
33 M 95 GinPair 10 43 57.7313485800 +11 42 13.301191332 0.002602 779 780.01 10.71 10.51 9.73 9.48   ~ SBb 7.08 4.27 13 1106
34 SN 2009md Supernova 10 48 26.28 +12 32 02.8 0.0044 1305 1308           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 66
35 LSQ 15ok Supernova 10 49 16.68 -19 38 26.0 0.01 2983 2998           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 4
36 ESO 569-12 Seyfert1 10 49 16.7371491408 -19 38 12.665226264 0.014087 4193.3 4223.04   13.53   12.28 12.9 ~ -3.0 0.870 0.522 105 41
37 Mrk 1270 Seyfert1 10 55 49.1922977736 -09 51 36.126291168 0.028146 8319.3 8438.00   14.7   14.5 14.4 ~ S 0.260 0.229 60 29
38 SN 2013ht Supernova 10 55 50.95 -09 51 42.4 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 2
39 LSQ 13dpa Supernova 11 01 12.91 -05 50 52.5 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 13
40 SN 2014dw Supernova 11 10 48.41 -37 27 02.2 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 12
41 NGC 3568 Seyfert1 11 10 48.5525122964 -37 26 51.850678068 0.008181 2442.5 2452.53   13.01 12.58 11.61 12.5 ~ 4.7 1.823 0.547 5 78
42 SN 2014U Supernova 11 44 52.16 +19 27 17.8 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 3
43 NGC 3859 HIIG 11 44 52.2245400768 +19 27 15.258918744 0.01824 5418 5468.2   14.9   13.80   ~ Sp 0.663 0.239 55 97
44 SN 2008in Supernova 12 22 01.77 +04 28 47.5 0.0052 1562 1566           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 102
45 SN 2009N Supernova 12 31 09.46 -08 02 56.3 0.0035 1034 1036           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 96
46 SDSS J125258.03+322444.5 Galaxy 12 52 58.033 +32 24 44.28 0.02264 6710 6787.3           ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 9
47 ASASSN -13dn Supernova 12 52 58.20 +32 25 09.3 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 4
48 ESO 381-48 EmissionG 13 01 05.55 -36 36 02.4 0.016124 4795 4833.97   15.02 15.21 14.10 14.53 ~ 3.0 0.78 0.48 111 22
49 ASASSN -15bb Supernova 13 01 06.380 -36 36 00.17 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 5
50 NGC 5054 Seyfert1 13 16 58.488 -16 38 05.46 0.005855 1750.0 1755.14   11.3   10.36 10.7 ~ Sb 4.68 2.95 172 190
51 SN 2014A Supernova 13 16 59.36 -16 37 57.0 0.006 1793 1799           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 11
52 SN 2005cs Supernova 13 29 53.37 +47 10 28.2 0.0015 449 450   14.5       SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 411
53 NGC 5227 Seyfert2 13 35 24.5500134480 +01 24 38.076433380 0.380 0.205 0.3327 0.01745 5186 5231.4   17.16 16.45     ~ SB 0.773 0.402 145 52
54 ASASSN -15fz Supernova 13 35 25.14 +01 24 33.0 ~ ~ ~     16.9     SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 5
55 LSQ 12bri Supernova 13 35 48.34 -21 23 53.5 0.030 8859 8994           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 3
56 NGC 5669 HIIG 14 32 43.476 +09 53 25.47 0.004610 1379 1382.19   13.2       ~ SB 0.803 0.627 50 193
57 SN 2013ab Supernova 14 32 44.49 +09 53 12.3 0.00532 1591 1594.9           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 61
58 SN 2013by Supernova 16 59 02.43 -60 11 41.8 0.00359 1074 1076.3           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 64
59 ESO 138-10 GtowardsGroup 16 59 02.952 -60 12 57.67 0.003833 1146.9 1149.10   11.57   10.52 10.7 ~ 8.0 ~ ~ ~ 67
60 ASASSN -15oz Supernova 19 19 33.49 -33 46 02.0 0.00693 2070 2077.6           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 17
61 SN 2017eaw Supernova 20 34 44.238 +60 11 36.00 0.000133 40 39.87           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 119
62 SN 2002hh Supernova 20 34 44.29 +60 07 19.0 0.000160 48 48.00     17.18     SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 152
63 SN 2004et Supernova 20 35 25.33 +60 07 17.7 0.0001 30 30   12.88       SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 492
64 SN 2014bt Supernova 21 43 11.13 -38 58 05.8 ~ ~ ~           SNIb/c ~ ~ ~ ~ 4
65 IC 5128 Seyfert2 21 43 11.7631871112 -38 58 05.455401384 0.015814 4703 4740.92   14.06   12.62   ~ 0.0 0.703 0.520 110 28
66 LEDA 68414 Galaxy 22 15 26.1 -10 28 41 0.006022 1800 1805.44           ~ ~ 0.60 0.60 90 6
67 SN 2014cw Supernova 22 15 26.55 -10 28 34.6 0.006 1793 1799           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 8
68 SN 2014dq Supernova 22 23 16.120 -28 58 30.78 0.00603 1802 1807.7           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 14
69 ESO 467-51 GinPair 22 23.3 -28 59 0.005944 1777 1781.97   14.53   13.83   ~ 6.0 2.88 0.32 99 51
70 NGC 7610 GtowardsCl 23 19 41.3871631752 +10 11 06.003153168 0.011919 3552 3573.29   14.9       ~ Scd 0.607 0.364 85 91
71 SN 2013fs Supernova 23 19 44.70 +10 11 05.0 0.0119 3546 3568           SNIIP ~ ~ ~ ~ 117
72 NGC 7742 GinPair 23 44 15.7534099368 +10 46 01.533226872 0.435 -0.119 0.005553 1660 1664.62   12.5       ~ Sa-Sc 1.087 1.021 175 209
73 SN 2014cy Supernova 23 44 16.03 +10 46 12.5 ~ ~ ~           SNII ~ ~ ~ ~ 17

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