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SN 2017gmr: An energetic Type II-P supernova with asymmetries

Authors :
Andrews, Jennifer E.
Sand, D. J.
Valenti, S.
Smith, Nathan
Dastidar, Raya
Sahu, D. K.
Misra, Kuntal
Singh, Avinash
Hiramatsu, D.
Brown, P. J.
Hosseinzadeh, G.
Wyatt, S.
Vinko, J.
Anupama, G. C.
Arcavi, I.
Ashall, Chris
Benetti, S.
Berton, Marco
Bostroem, K. A.
Bulla, M.
Burke, J.
Chen, S.
Chomiuk, L.
Cikota, A.
Congiu, E.
Cseh, B.
Davis, Scott
Elias-Rosa, N.
Faran, T.
Fraser, Morgan
Galbany, L.
Gall, C.
Gal-Yam, A.
Gangopadhyay, Anjasha
Gromadzki, M.
Haislip, J.
Howell, D. A.
Hsiao, E. Y.
Inserra, C.
Kankare, E.
Kuncarayakti, H.
Kouprianov, V.
Kumar, Brajesh
Li, Xue
Lin, Han
Maguire, K.
Mazzali, P.
McCully, C.
Milne, P.
Mo, Jun
Morrell, N.
Nicholl, M.
Ochner, P.
Olivares, F.
Pastorello, A.
Patat, F.
Phillips, M.
Pignata, G.
Prentice, S.
Reguitti, A.
Reichart, D. E.
Rodríguez, Ó.
Rui, Liming
Sanwal, Pankaj
Sárneczky, K.
Shahbandeh, M.
Singh, Mridweeka
Smartt, S.
Strader, J.
Stritzinger, M. D.
Szakáts, R.
Tartaglia, L.
Wang, Huijuan
Wang, Lingzhi
Wang, Xiaofeng
Wheeler, J. C.
Xang, Danfeng
Yaron, O.
Young, D. R.
Zhang, Junbo
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present high-cadence ultraviolet (UV), optical, and near-infrared (NIR) data on the luminous Type II-P supernova SN 2017gmr from hours after discovery through the first 180 days. SN 2017gmr does not show signs of narrow, high-ionization emission lines in the early optical spectra, yet the optical lightcurve evolution suggests that an extra energy source from circumstellar medium (CSM) interaction must be present for at least 2 days after explosion. Modeling of the early lightcurve indicates a ~500R$_{\odot}$ progenitor radius, consistent with a rather compact red supergiant, and late-time luminosities indicate up to 0.130 $\pm$ 0.026 M$_{\odot}$ of $^{56}$Ni are present, if the lightcurve is solely powered by radioactive decay, although the $^{56}$Ni mass may be lower if CSM interaction contributes to the post-plateau luminosity. Prominent multi-peaked emission lines of H$\alpha$ and [O I] emerge after day 154, as a result of either an asymmetric explosion or asymmetries in the CSM. The lack of narrow lines within the first two days of explosion in the likely presence of CSM interaction may be an example of close, dense, asymmetric CSM that is quickly enveloped by the spherical supernova ejecta.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 25 pages, plus Appendix

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1907.01013
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab43e3