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Supernova Progenitors, Their Variability, and the Type IIP Supernova ASASSN-16fq in M66

Authors :
Kochanek, C. S.
Fraser, M.
Adams, S. M.
Sukhbold, T.
Prieto, J. L.
Muller, T.
Bock, G.
Brown, J. S.
Dong, Subo
Holoien, T. W. -S.
Khan, R.
Shappee, B. J.
Stanek, K. Z.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We identify a pre-explosion counterpart to the nearby Type IIP supernova ASASSN-16fq (SN 2016cok) in archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data. The source appears to be a blend of several stars that prevents obtaining accurate photometry. However, with reasonable assumptions about the stellar temperature and extinction, the progenitor almost certainly had an initial mass M<17Msun, and was most likely in the mass range 8-12Msun. Observations once ASASSN-16fq has faded will have no difficulty accurately determining the properties of the progenitor. In 8 years of Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) data, no significant progenitor variability is detected to RMS limits of roughly 0.03 mag. Of the six nearby SN with constraints on low level variability, SN 1987A, SN 1993J, SN 2008cn, SN 2011dh, SN 2013ej and ASASSN-16fq, only the slowly fading progenitor of SN 2011dh showed clear evidence of variability. Excluding SN 1987A, the 90% confidence limit implied by these sources on the number of outbursts over the last decade before the SN that last longer than 0.1 years (FWHM) and are brighter than M_R<-8 mag is approximately N<3. Our continuing LBT monitoring program will steadily improve constraints on pre-SN progenitor variability at amplitudes far lower than achievable by SN surveys.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1609.00022
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx291