Browsing by Author "Coulter, D. A."
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemATClean: a novel method for detecting low-luminosity transients and application to pre-explosion counterparts from SN 2023ixf(2024) Rest, S.; Rest, A.; Kilpatrick, C. D.; Jencson, J. E.; Coelln, S. von; Strolger, L.; Smartt, S.; Anderson, J. P.; Clocchiatti García, Alejandro; Coulter, D. A.; Denneau, L.; Gómez, S.; Heinze, A.; Ridden-Harper, R.; Smith, K. W.; Stalder, B.; Tonry, J. l.; Wang, Q.; Zenati, Y.In an effort to search for faint sources of emission over arbitrary timescales, we present a novel method for analyzing forced photometry light curves in difference imaging from optical surveys. Our method “ATLAS Clean” or ATClean, utilizes the reported fluxes, uncertainties, and fits to the point-spread function from difference images to quantify the statistical significance of individual measurements. We apply this method to control light curves across the image to determine whether any source of flux is present in the data for a range of specific timescales. From ATLAS o-band imaging at the site of the Type II supernova (SN) 2023ixf in M101 from 2015–2023, we show that this method accurately reproduces the 3σ flux limits produced from other, more computationally expensive methods. We derive limits for emission on timescales of 5 days and 80-300 days at the site of SN 2023ixf, which are 19.8 and 21.3 mag, respectively. The latter limits rule out variability for inextinguished red supergiants (RSG) with initial masses >22 M⊙, comparable to the most luminous predictions for the SN 2023ixf progenitor system. We also compare our limits to short timescale outbursts, similar to those expected for Type IIn SN progenitor stars or the Type II SN 2020tlf, and rule out outburst ejecta masses of >0.021 M⊙, much lower than the inferred mass of circumstellar matter around SN 2023ixf in the literature. In the future, these methods can be applied to any forced point-spread function photometry on difference imaging from other surveys, such as Rubin optical imaging.
- ItemFinal Moments. II. Observational Properties and Physical Modeling of Circumstellar-material-interacting Type II Supernovae(2024) Jacobson-Galan, W. V.; Dessart, L.; Davis, K. W.; Kilpatrick, C. D.; Margutti, R.; Foley, R. J.; Chornock, R.; Terreran, G.; Hiramatsu, D.; Newsome, M.; Padilla Gonzalez, E.; Pellegrino, C.; Howell, D. A.; Filippenko, A. V.; Anderson, J. P.; Angus, C. R.; Auchettl, K.; Bostroem, K. A.; Brink, T. G.; Cartier, R.; Coulter, D. A.; de Boer, T.; Drout, M. R.; Earl, N.; Ertini, K.; Farah, J. R.; Farias, D.; Gall, C.; Gao, H.; Gerlach, M. A.; Guo, F.; Haynie, A.; Hosseinzadeh, G.; Ibik, A. L.; Jha, S. W.; Jones, D. O.; Langeroodi, D.; Lebaron, N.; Magnier, E. A.; Piro, A. L.; Raimundo, S. I.; Rest, A.; Rest, S.; Rich, R. Michael; Rojas-Bravo, C.; Sears, H.; Taggart, K.; Villar, V. A.; Wainscoat, R. J.; Wang, X-f.; Wasserman, A. R.; Yan, S.; Yang, Y.; Zhang, J.; Zheng, W.We present ultraviolet/optical/near-infrared observations and modeling of Type II supernovae (SNe II) whose early time (delta(t) < 2 days) spectra show transient, narrow emission lines from shock ionization of confined (r < 10(15) cm) circumstellar material (CSM). The observed electron-scattering broadened line profiles (i.e., IIn-like) of H i, He i/ii, C iv, and N iii/iv/v from the CSM persist on a characteristic timescale (t(IIn)) that marks a transition to a lower-density CSM and the emergence of Doppler-broadened features from the fast-moving SN ejecta. Our sample, the largest to date, consists of 39 SNe with early time IIn-like features in addition to 35 "comparison" SNe with no evidence of early time IIn-like features, all with ultraviolet observations. The total sample includes 50 unpublished objects with a total of 474 previously unpublished spectra and 50 multiband light curves, collected primarily through the Young Supernova Experiment and Global Supernova Project collaborations. For all sample objects, we find a significant correlation between peak ultraviolet brightness and both t(II)n and the rise time, as well as evidence for enhanced peak luminosities in SNe II with IIn-like features. We quantify mass-loss rates and CSM density for the sample through the matching of peak multiband absolute magnitudes, rise times, t(IIn), and optical SN spectra with a grid of radiation hydrodynamics and non-local thermodynamic equilibrium radiative-transfer simulations. For our grid of models, all with the same underlying explosion, there is a trend between the duration of the electron-scattering broadened line profiles and inferred mass-loss rate: t(IIn) approximate to 3.8[M/ (0.01 M-circle dot yr(-1))] days.