Slowly fading super-luminous supernovae that are not pair-instability explosions
- PMID: 24132291
- DOI: 10.1038/nature12569
Slowly fading super-luminous supernovae that are not pair-instability explosions
Erratum in
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Corrigendum: Slowly fading super-luminous supernovae that are not pair-instability explosions.Nature. 2016 Nov 24;539(7630):598. doi: 10.1038/nature19850. Epub 2016 Oct 5. Nature. 2016. PMID: 27706143 No abstract available.
Abstract
Super-luminous supernovae that radiate more than 10(44) ergs per second at their peak luminosity have recently been discovered in faint galaxies at redshifts of 0.1-4. Some evolve slowly, resembling models of 'pair-instability' supernovae. Such models involve stars with original masses 140-260 times that of the Sun that now have carbon-oxygen cores of 65-130 solar masses. In these stars, the photons that prevent gravitational collapse are converted to electron-positron pairs, causing rapid contraction and thermonuclear explosions. Many solar masses of (56)Ni are synthesized; this isotope decays to (56)Fe via (56)Co, powering bright light curves. Such massive progenitors are expected to have formed from metal-poor gas in the early Universe. Recently, supernova 2007bi in a galaxy at redshift 0.127 (about 12 billion years after the Big Bang) with a metallicity one-third that of the Sun was observed to look like a fading pair-instability supernova. Here we report observations of two slow-to-fade super-luminous supernovae that show relatively fast rise times and blue colours, which are incompatible with pair-instability models. Their late-time light-curve and spectral similarities to supernova 2007bi call the nature of that event into question. Our early spectra closely resemble typical fast-declining super-luminous supernovae, which are not powered by radioactivity. Modelling our observations with 10-16 solar masses of magnetar-energized ejecta demonstrates the possibility of a common explosion mechanism. The lack of unambiguous nearby pair-instability events suggests that their local rate of occurrence is less than 6 × 10(-6) times that of the core-collapse rate.
Comment in
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Astrophysics: Super-luminous supernovae on the rise.Nature. 2013 Oct 17;502(7471):310-2. doi: 10.1038/502310a. Nature. 2013. PMID: 24132286 No abstract available.
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