Back to Search Start Over

The Berkeley sample of Type II supernovae: BVRI light curves and spectroscopy of 55 SNe II

Authors :
T. Lowe
Kevin Tang
M. de Kouchkovsky
Chadwick Casper
Jon C. Mauerhan
Sameen Yunus
Erin Leonard
Maryam Modjaz
Benjamin T. Jeffers
H. Yuk
WeiKang Zheng
D. Cohen
T. G. Brink
Melissa L. Graham
Sanyum Channa
A. Wilkins
Samantha Cargill
Niels Joubert
Daniel A. Perley
B. Y. Choi
Carolina Gould
B. E. Cobb
Kiera L. Fuller
K. J. McAllister
Keto D. Zhang
Isaac Shivvers
Jeffrey Molloy
Xiaofeng Wang
Alexei V. Filippenko
Gary Z. Li
C. Soler
S. Taylor
Timothy W. Ross
Jeffrey M. Silverman
A. Bigley
Minkyu Kim
M. Mason
Xiang-Gao Wang
Julia Hestenes
O. D. Fox
Kelsey I. Clubb
Kyle Blanchard
M. Ganeshalingam
Samantha Stegman
Goni Halevi
Patrick L. Kelly
Haejung Kim
J. Bradley
Edward Falcon
P. Lu
Kenia Pina
K. T. Hayakawa
Dovi Poznanski
M. Ellison
Benjamin E. Stahl
P. K. Blanchard
M. T. Kandrashoff
T. de Jaeger
Sanjay Kumar
M. P. Hyland
S. B. Cenko
Publisher :
Oxford University Press

Abstract

In this work, BV RI light curves of 55 Type II supernovae (SNe II) from the Lick Observatory Supernova Search program obtained with the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope and the 1 m Nickel telescope from 2006 to 2018 are presented. Additionally, more than 150 spectra gathered with the 3 m Shane telescope are published. We conduct an analyse of the peak absolute magnitudes, decline rates, and time durations of different phases of the light and colour curves. Typically, our light curves are sampled with a median cadence of 5.5 days for a total of 5093 photometric points. In average V-band plateau declines with a rate of 1.29 mag (100 days)-1, which is consistent with previously published samples. For each band, the plateau slope correlates with the plateau length and the absolute peak magnitude: SNe II with steeper decline have shorter plateau duration and are brighter. A time-evolution analysis of spectral lines in term of velocities and pseudoequivalent widths is also presented in this paper. Our spectroscopic sample ranges between 1 and 200 days post-explosion and has a median ejecta expansion velocity at 50 days post-explosion of 6500 km/s (Halpha line) and a standard dispersion of 2000 km/s. Nebular spectra are in good agreement with theoretical models using a progenitor star having a mass<br />24 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f827d0768aa3801bc009f10b5dc814b2