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Studying the ultraviolet spectrum of the first spectroscopically confirmed supernova at redshift two

Authors :
Smith, M
Sullivan, M
Nichol, RC
Galbany, L
D'Andrea, CB
Inserra, C
Lidman, C
Rest, A
Schirmer, M
Filippenko, AV
Zheng, W
Bradley Cenko, S
Angus, CR
Brown, PJ
Davis, TM
Finley, DA
Foley, RJ
González-Gaitán, S
Gutiérrez, CP
Kessler, R
Kuhlmann, S
Marriner, J
Möller, A
Nugent, PE
Prajs, S
Thomas, R
Wolf, R
Zenteno, A
Abbott, TMC
Abdalla, FB
Allam, S
Annis, J
Bechtol, K
Benoit-Lévy, A
Bertin, E
Brooks, D
Burke, DL
Carnero Rosell, A
Carrasco Kind, M
Carretero, J
Castander, FJ
Crocce, M
Cunha, CE
Da Costa, LN
Davis, C
Desai, S
Diehl, HT
Doel, P
Eifler, TF
Flaugher, B
Fosalba, P
Frieman, J
García-Bellido, J
Gaztanaga, E
Gerdes, DW
Goldstein, DA
Gruen, D
Gruendl, RA
Gschwend, J
Gutierrez, G
Honscheid, K
James, DJ
Johnson, MWG
Kuehn, K
Kuropatkin, N
Li, TS
Lima, M
Maia, MAG
Marshall, JL
Martini, P
Menanteau, F
Source :
Smith, M; Sullivan, M; Nichol, RC; Galbany, L; D'Andrea, CB; Inserra, C; et al.(2018). Studying the ultraviolet spectrum of the first spectroscopically confirmed supernova at redshift two. Astrophysical Journal, 854(1). doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaa126. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/41t078q9
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

© 2018 The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. We present observations of DES16C2nm, the first spectroscopically confirmed hydrogen-free superluminous supernova (SLSN-I) at redshift z ≊ 2. DES16C2nm was discovered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program, with follow-up photometric data from the Hubble Space Telescope, Gemini, and the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope supplementing the DES data. Spectroscopic observations confirm DES16C2nm to be at z = 1.998, and spectroscopically similar to Gaia16apd (a SLSN-I at z = 0.102), with a peak absolute magnitude of U = -22.26 ± 0.06. The high redshift of DES16C2nm provides a unique opportunity to study the ultraviolet (UV) properties of SLSNe-I. Combining DES16C2nm with 10 similar events from the literature, we show that there exists a homogeneous class of SLSNe-I in the UV (λrest≊ 2500 Å), with peak luminosities in the (rest-frame) U band, and increasing absorption to shorter wavelengths. There is no evidence that the mean photometric and spectroscopic properties of SLSNe-I differ between low (z < 1) and high redshift (z > 1), but there is clear evidence of diversity in the spectrum at λrest< 2000 Å, possibly caused by the variations in temperature between events. No significant correlations are observed between spectral line velocities and photometric luminosity. Using these data, we estimate that SLSNe-I can be discovered to z = 3.8 by DES. While SLSNe-I are typically identified from their blue observed colors at low redshift (z < 1), we highlight that at z > 2 these events appear optically red, peaking in the observer-frame z-band. Such characteristics are critical to identify these objects with future facilities such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, Euclid, and the Wide-field Infrared Survey Telescope, which should detect such SLSNe-I to z = 3.5, 3.7, and 6.6, respectively.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Smith, M; Sullivan, M; Nichol, RC; Galbany, L; D'Andrea, CB; Inserra, C; et al.(2018). Studying the ultraviolet spectrum of the first spectroscopically confirmed supernova at redshift two. Astrophysical Journal, 854(1). doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaa126. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/41t078q9
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..0caa7431c9831c9036bb158fd114e986