4.7 Article

Spectra of Hydrogen-poor Superluminous Supernovae from the Palomar Transient Factory

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 855, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaac2f

Keywords

supernovae: general

Funding

  1. W.M. Keck Foundation
  2. NASA through a grant from STScI [GO-12223, GO-12524]
  3. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  4. EU/FP7-ERC grant [615929]
  5. Weizmann Institute of Science Koshland Center for Basic Research
  6. Christopher R. Redlich Fund
  7. TABASGO Foundation
  8. NSF [AST-1211916]
  9. Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science (U.C. Berkeley)
  10. GROWTH project - NSF [AST-1545949]
  11. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT130101219]
  12. EU via ERC grant [725161]
  13. Quantum Universe I-Core program
  14. ISF
  15. BSF Transformative program
  16. Kimmel award
  17. European Research Council (ERC) [725161] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Most Type I superluminous supernovae (SLSNe-I) reported to date have been identified by their high peak luminosities and spectra lacking obvious signs of hydrogen. We demonstrate that these events can be distinguished from normal-luminosity SNe (including Type Ic events) solely from their spectra over a wide range of light-curve phases. We use this distinction to select 19 SLSNe-I and four possible SLSNe-I from the Palomar Transient Factory archive (including seven previously published objects). We present 127 new spectra of these objects and combine these with 39 previously published spectra, and we use these to discuss the average spectral properties of SLSNe-I at different spectral phases. We find that Mn II most probably contributes to the ultraviolet spectral features after maximum light, and we give a detailed study of the O II features that often characterize the early-time optical spectra of SLSNe-I. We discuss the velocity distribution of O II, finding that for some SLSNe-I this can be confined to a narrow range compared to relatively large systematic velocity shifts. Mg II and Fe II favor higher velocities than O II and C II, and we briefly discuss how this may constrain power-source models. We tentatively group objects by how well they match either SN 2011ke or PTF12dam and discuss the possibility that physically distinct events may have been previously grouped together under the SLSN-I label.

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