Home /Research /A<i>Hubble Space Telescope</i>Snapshot Survey of Nearby Supernovae
OTHER

A<i>Hubble Space Telescope</i>Snapshot Survey of Nearby Supernovae

Weidong Li, A. V. Filippenko, Schuyler D. Van Dyk, Jingyao Hu, Yulei Qiu, M. Modjaz, Douglas C. Leonard

Year
2002
Citations
58
Access
Open access

Abstract

We present photometry of 12 recent supernovae (SNe) recovered in a {\it Hubble Space Telescope} Snapshot program, and tie the measurements to earlier ground-based observations, in order to study the late-time evolution of the SNe. Many of the ground-based measurements are previously unpublished, and were made primarily with a robotic telescope, the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope. Evidence for circumstellar interaction is common among the core-collapse SNe. Late-time decline rates for Type IIn SNe are found to span a wide range, perhaps due to differences in circumstellar interaction. An extreme case, SN IIn 1995N, declined by only 1.2 mag in $V$ over about 4 years following discovery. Template images of some SNe must therefore be obtained many years after the explosion, if contamination from the SN itself is to be minimized. Evidence is found against a previous hypothesis that the Type IIn SN 1997bs was actually a superoutburst of a luminous blue variable star. The peculiar SN Ic 1997ef, a "hypernova," declined very slowly at late times. The decline rate of the SN Ia 2000cx decreased at late times, but this is unlikely to have been caused by a light echo.

Keywords

SupernovaPhysicsHubble space telescopePhotometry (optics)AstrophysicsAstronomyTelescopeAdvanced Camera for SurveysSnapshot (computer storage)Stars

Related papers

Browse all OTHER papers