DES16C3cje: A low-luminosity, long-lived supernova
hep-ph
/ Authors
C. P. Gutiérrez, M. Sullivan, L. Martinez, M. C. Bersten, C. Inserra, M. Smith, J. P. Anderson, Y. -C. Pan, A. Pastorello, L. Galbany
and 82 more authors
P. Nugent, C. R. Angus, C. Barbarino, T. -W. Chen, T. M. Davis, M. Della Valle, R. J. Foley, M. Fraser, C. Frohmaier, S. González-Gaitán, G. F. Lewis, M. Gromadzki, E. Kankare, R. Kokotanekova, J. Kollmeier, M. R. Magee, K. Maguire, A. Möller, N. Morrell, M. Nicholl, M. Pursiainen, J. Sollerman, N. E. Sommer,
/ Abstract
We present DES16C3cje, a low-luminosity, long-lived type II supernova (SN II) at redshift 0.0618, detected by the Dark Energy Survey (DES). DES16C3cje is a unique SN. The spectra are characterized by extremely narrow photospheric lines corresponding to very low expansion velocities of $\lesssim1500$ km s$^{-1}$, and the light curve shows an initial peak that fades after 50 days before slowly rebrightening over a further 100 days to reach an absolute brightness of M$_r\sim -15.5$ mag. The decline rate of the late-time light curve is then slower than that expected from the powering by radioactive decay of $^{56}$Co but is comparable to that expected from accretion power. Comparing the bolometric light curve with hydrodynamical models, we find that DES16C3cje can be explained by either i) a low explosion energy (0.11 foe) and relatively large $^{56}$Ni production of 0.075 M$_{\odot}$ from a $\sim15$ M$_{\odot}$ red supergiant progenitor typical of other SNe II, or ii) a relatively compact $\sim40$ M$_{\odot}$ star, explosion energy of 1 foe, and 0.08 M$_{\odot}$ of $^{56}$Ni. Both scenarios require additional energy input to explain the late-time light curve, which is consistent with fallback accretion at a rate of $\sim0.5\times{10^{-8}}$ M$_{\odot}$ s$^{-1}$.