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SNhunt151: an explosive event inside a dense cocoon

Authors :
A. Morales-Garoffolo
A. Pastorello
P. Ochner
Massimo Turatto
Enrico Cappellaro
Tuomas Kangas
Erkki Kankare
Alexei V. Filippenko
Nancy Elias-Rosa
S. Geier
S. Valenti
F. Ciabattari
S. Howerton
S. Benetti
S. G. Djorgovski
D. A. Howell
Giacomo Terreran
Andrew J. Drake
Leonardo Tartaglia
Giuliano Pignata
S. Leonini
L. Tomasella
Jordi Isern
ITA
USA
GBR
ESP
CHL
SWE
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 475:2614-2631
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.

Abstract

SNhunt151 was initially classified as a supernova (SN) impostor (nonterminal outburst of a massive star). It exhibited a slow increase in luminosity, lasting about 450 d, followed by a major brightening that reaches M_V ~ -18 mag. No source is detected to M_V > -13 mag in archival images at the position of SNhunt151 before the slow rise. Low-to-mid-resolution optical spectra obtained during the pronounced brightening show very little evolution, being dominated at all times by multicomponent Balmer emission lines, a signature of interaction between the material ejected in the new outburst and the pre-existing circumstellar medium. We also analyzed mid-infrared images from the Spitzer Space Telescope, detecting a source at the transient position in 2014 and 2015. Overall, SNhunt151 is spectroscopically a Type IIn SN, somewhat similar to SN2009ip. However, there are also some differences, such as a slow pre-discovery rise, a relatively broad light-curve peak showing a longer rise time (~ 50 d) and a slower decline, along with a negligible change in the temperature around the peak (T < 10^4 K). We suggest that SNhunt151 is the result of an outburst, or a SN explosion, within a dense circumstellar nebula, similar to those embedding some luminous blue variables like Eta Carinae and originating from past mass-loss events.<br />Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 19 pages with 10 tables and 11 figures

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
475
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00b55119ab6419241d711ccb8f40a70f