Publication Date:
2013-04-26
Description:
We present photometry and spectroscopy of the Type IIn supernova (SN) 2011ht, identified previously as a possible SN impostor. The light curve exhibits an abrupt transition from a well-defined ~120 d plateau to a steep bolometric decline, plummeting 4–5 mag in the optical and 2–3 mag in the infrared in only ~10 d. Leading up to peak brightness ( M V = –17.4 mag), a hot emission-line spectrum exhibits strong signs of interaction with circumstellar material (CSM), in the form of relatively narrow P-Cygni features of H i and He i superimposed on broad Lorentzian wings. For the latter half of the plateau phase, the spectrum exhibits strengthening P-Cygni profiles of Fe ii , Ca ii and Hα. By day 147, after the plateau has ended, the SN entered the nebular phase, heralded by the appearance of forbidden transitions of [O i ], [O ii ] and [Ca ii ] over a weak continuum. At this stage, the light curve exhibits a low optical luminosity that is comparable to that of the most subluminous Type II-P supernovae, and a relatively fast visual wavelength decline that appeared to be significantly steeper than the 56 Co decay rate. However, the total pseudo-bolometric decline, including the infrared luminosity, is consistent with 56 Co decay, and implies a low 56 Ni mass in the range 0.006–0.01 M , near the lower end of the range exhibited by SNe II-P. We therefore characterize SN 2011ht as a core-collapse SN very similar to the peculiar SNe IIn 1994W and 2009kn. These three SNe appear to define a subclass, which are Type IIn based on their spectrum, but that also exhibit well-defined plateaus and produce low 56 Ni yields. We therefore suggest Type IIn-P as a name for this subclass. The absence of observational signatures of high-velocity material from SNe IIn-P could be the result of an opaque shell at the shocked SN-CSM interface, which remains optically thick longer than the time-scale for the inner ejecta to cool and become transparent. Possible progenitors of SNe IIn-P, consistent with the available data, include 8–10 M stars, which undergo core collapse as a result of electron capture after a brief phase of enhanced mass loss, or more massive ( M 25 M ) progenitors, which experience substantial fallback of the metal-rich radioactive ejecta. In either case, the energy radiated by these three SNe during their plateau (2–3 x 10 49 erg for SN 2011ht) must be dominated by CSM interaction, and the subluminous tail is the result of low 56 Ni yield.
Print ISSN:
0035-8711
Electronic ISSN:
1365-2966
Topics:
Physics
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