SN 2008in − BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN NORMAL AND FAINT SUPERNOVAE OF TYPE IIP
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Date
2011-06-10
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Abstract
We present optical photometric and low-resolution spectroscopic observations of the Type II plateau
supernova (SN) 2008in, which occurred in the outskirts of the nearly face-on spiral galaxy M 61.
Photometric data in the X-rays, ultraviolet and near-infrared bands have been used to characterize
this event. The SN field was imaged with the ROTSE-IIIb optical telescope about seven days before
the explosion. This allowed us to constrain the epoch of the shock breakout to JD = 2454825.6. The
duration of the plateau phase, as derived from the photometric monitoring, was 98 days. The spectra
of SN 2008in show a striking resemblance to those of the archetypal low-luminosity IIP SNe 1997D
and 1999br. A comparison of ejecta kinematics of SN 2008in with the hydrodynamical simulations
of Type IIP SNe by Dessart et al. (2010) indicates that it is a less energetic event ( 5 × 1050 erg).
However, the light curve indicates that the production of radioactive 56Ni is significantly higher than
that in the low-luminosity SNe. Adopting an interstellar absorption along the SN direction of AV
0.3 mag and a distance of 13.2 Mpc, we estimated a synthesized 56Ni mass of 0.015M⊙. Employing
semi-analytical formulae (Litvinova & Nadezhin 1985), we derived a pre-SN radius of 126R⊙ , an
explosion energy of 5.4 × 1050 erg and a total ejected mass of 16.7M⊙ . The latter indicates
that the zero age main-sequence mass of the progenitor did not exceed 20M⊙ . Considering the above
properties of SN 2008in and its occurrence in a region of sub-solar metallicity ([O/H] 8.44 dex),
it is unlikely that fall-back of the ejecta onto a newly formed black hole occurred in SN 2008in. We
therefore favor a low-energy explosion scenario of a relatively compact, moderate-mass progenitor star
that generates a neutron star.
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Keywords
Supernovae: general, Supernovae: individual (2008in)