SN 1997D in NGC 1536 is possibly the least luminous and energetic Type II supernova discovered to date. The entire light curve is subluminous, never reaching Mv = -14.65. The radioactive tail follows the 56Co decay slope. In the case of a nearly complete trapping of the γ-rays, the 36Ni mass derived from the tail brightness is extremely small, ∼0.002 M⊙. At discovery, the spectra showed a red continuum and line velocities on the order of 1000 km s-1. The luminosity and the photospheric expansion velocity suggest that the explosion occurred about 50 days before discovery and that a plateau probably followed. Model light curves and spectra of the explosion of a 26 M̈ star successfully fitted the observations. Low-mass models are inconsistent with the observations. The radius of the progenitor, constrained by the prediscovery upper limits, is R0 ≳ 300 R⊙. A low explosion energy of ∼4 × 1050 ergs is then required in the modeling. The strong Ba n lines in the photospheric spectra are reproduced with a solar abundance and low Teff. A scenario in which the low 56Ni mass observed in SN 1997D is due to fallback of material onto the collapsed remnant of the explosion of a 25-40 M⊙ star appears to be favored over the case of the explosion of an 8-10 M⊙ star with low 56Ni production. © 1998. The American Astronomical Society. All rights resered.
CITATION STYLE
Turatto, M., Mazzali, P. A., Young, T. R., Nomoto, K., Iwamoto, K., Benetti, S., … Sollerman, J. (1998). The Peculiar Type II Supernova 1997D: A Case for a Very Low [TSUP]56[/TSUP]N[CLC]i[/CLC] Mass. The Astrophysical Journal, 498(2), L129–L133. https://doi.org/10.1086/311324
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.