4.7 Article

An extremely bright echo associated with SN 2002hh

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 669, Issue 1, Pages 525-533

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/521542

Keywords

dust; extinction; scattering; supernovae : general

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Facilities Council [PP/D001269/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  2. STFC [PP/D001269/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We present new, very late time optical photometry and spectroscopy of the interesting Type II-P supernova SN 2002hh, in NGC 6946. Gemini/GMOS-N has been used to acquire visible spectra at six epochs between 2004 August and 2006 July, following the evolution of the SN from age 661 to 1358 days. Few optical spectra of Type II supernovae with ages greater than 1 yr exist. In addition, g', r', and i' images were acquired at all six epochs. The spectral and photometric evolution of SN 2002hh has been very unusual. Measures of the brightness of this SN, both in the R and I bands, as well as in the H alpha emission flux, show no significant fading over an interval of nearly 2 years. The most straightforward explanation for this behavior is that the light being measured comes not only from the SN itself but also from an echo off nearby dust. Echoes have been detected previously around several SNe, but these echoes, at their brightest, were similar to 8 mag below the maximum brightness of the SN. At V similar to 21 mag, the putative echo dominates the light of SN 2002hh and is only similar to 4 mag below the outburst's peak brightness. There is an estimated 6 mag of total extinction in V toward SN 2002hh. The proposed explanation of a differential echo/SN absorption is inconsistent with the observed BVRI colors.

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