Back to Search Start Over

SN 2018bsz: significant dust formation in a nearby superluminous supernova

Authors :
Chen, T. -W.
Brennan, S. J.
Wesson, R.
Fraser, M.
Schweyer, T.
Inserra, C.
Schulze, S.
Nicholl, M.
Anderson, J. P.
Hsiao, E. Y.
Jerkstrand, A.
Kankare, E.
Kool, E. C.
Kravtsov, T.
Kuncarayakti, H.
Leloudas, G.
Li, C. -J.
Matsuura, M.
Pursiainen, M.
Roy, R.
Ruiter, A. J.
Schady, P.
Seitenzahl, I.
Sollerman, J.
Tartaglia, L.
Wang, L.
Yates, R. M.
Yang, S.
Baade, D.
Carini, R.
Gal-Yam, A.
Galbany, L.
Gonzalez-Gaitan, S.
Gromadzki, M.
Gutierrez, C. P.
Kotak, R.
Maguire, K.
Mazzali, P. A.
Mueller-Bravo, T. E.
Paraskeva, E.
Pessi, P. J.
Pignata, G.
Rau, A.
Young, D. R.
Chen, T. -W.
Brennan, S. J.
Wesson, R.
Fraser, M.
Schweyer, T.
Inserra, C.
Schulze, S.
Nicholl, M.
Anderson, J. P.
Hsiao, E. Y.
Jerkstrand, A.
Kankare, E.
Kool, E. C.
Kravtsov, T.
Kuncarayakti, H.
Leloudas, G.
Li, C. -J.
Matsuura, M.
Pursiainen, M.
Roy, R.
Ruiter, A. J.
Schady, P.
Seitenzahl, I.
Sollerman, J.
Tartaglia, L.
Wang, L.
Yates, R. M.
Yang, S.
Baade, D.
Carini, R.
Gal-Yam, A.
Galbany, L.
Gonzalez-Gaitan, S.
Gromadzki, M.
Gutierrez, C. P.
Kotak, R.
Maguire, K.
Mazzali, P. A.
Mueller-Bravo, T. E.
Paraskeva, E.
Pessi, P. J.
Pignata, G.
Rau, A.
Young, D. R.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We investigate the thermal emission and extinction from dust associated with the nearby superluminous supernova (SLSN) 2018bsz. Our dataset has daily cadence and simultaneous optical and near-infrared coverage up to ~ 100 days, together with late time (+ 1.7 yr) MIR observations. At 230 days after light curve peak the SN is not detected in the optical, but shows a surprisingly strong near-infrared excess, with r - J > 3 mag and r - Ks > 5 mag. The time evolution of the infrared light curve enables us to investigate if the mid-infrared emission is from newly formed dust inside the SN ejecta, from a pre-existing circumstellar envelope, or interstellar material heated by the radiation from the SN. We find the latter two scenarios can be ruled out, and a scenario where new dust is forming in the SN ejecta at epochs > 200 days can self-consistently reproduce the evolution of the SN flux. We can fit the spectral energy distribution well at +230 d with 5 x 10^-4 solar mass of carbon dust, increasing over the following several hundred days to 10^-2 solar mass by +535 d. SN 2018bsz is the first SLSN showing evidence for dust formation within the SN ejecta, and appears to form ten times more dust than normal core-collapse SNe at similar epochs. Together with their preference for low mass, low metallicity host galaxies, we suggest that SLSNe may be a significant contributor to dust formation in the early Universe.<br />Comment: 14 pages and 7 figures in main text, 12 pages and 6 figures in appendix. The observational data will be updated once the paper is accepted

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363552305
Document Type :
Electronic Resource