The Peculiar Type II Supernova 1997D: A Case for a Very Low [TSUP]56[/TSUP]N[CLC]i[/CLC] Mass

Turatto, M.; Mazzali, P. A.; Young, T. R.; Nomoto, K.; Iwamoto, K.; Benetti, S.; Cappellaro, E.; Danziger, I. J.; de Mello, D. F.; Phillips, M. M.; Suntzeff, N. B.; Clocchiatti, A.; Piemonte, A.; Leibundgut, B.; Covarrubias, R.; et. al.

Abstract

SN 1997D in NGC 1536 is possibly the least luminous and energetic Type II supernova discovered to date. The entire light curve is subluminous, never reaching MV=-14.65. The radioactive tail follows the 56Co decay slope. In the case of a nearly complete trapping of the γ-rays, the 56Ni mass derived from the tail brightness is extremely small, ~0.002 Msolar. At discovery, the spectra showed a red continuum and line velocities on the order of 1000 km s-1. The luminosity and the photospheric expansion velocity suggest that the explosion occurred about 50 days before discovery and that a plateau probably followed. Model light curves and spectra of the explosion of a 26 Msolar star successfully fitted the observations. Low-mass models are inconsistent with the observations. The radius of the progenitor, constrained by the prediscovery upper limits, is R0<~300 Rsolar. A low explosion energy of ~4×1050 ergs is then required in the modeling. The strong Ba II lines in the photospheric spectra are reproduced with a solar abundance and low Teff. A scenario in which the low 56Ni mass observed in SN 1997D is due to fallback of material onto the collapsed remnant of the explosion of a 25-40 Msolar star appears to be favored over the case of the explosion of an 8-10 Msolar star with low 56Ni production. Based on observations collected at ESO-La Silla and Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) (Chile). CTIO, a part of the National Optical Astronomy Observatories, is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA), Inc., under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.

Más información

Título de la Revista: Astrophysical Journal
Volumen: 498
Número: 2
Editorial: Institute of Physics Publishing
Fecha de publicación: 1998
Página de inicio: L129
Página final: L133
DOI:

10.1086/311324