The Unique Type Ib Supernova 2005bf at Nebular Phases: A Possible Birth Event of A Strongly Magnetized Neutron Star
K. Maeda, M. Tanaka, K.Nomoto, N. Tominaga, K. Kawabata, P.A. Mazzali,, H. Umeda, T.Suzuki, T. Hattori

TL;DR
This paper analyzes late-phase spectra of SN 2005bf, suggesting it may have been powered by a newly born magnetar rather than radioactive decay, indicating a possible link to magnetar-powered supernovae.
Contribution
It proposes that the late-time luminosity of SN 2005bf is driven by a magnetar, providing an alternative to radioactive decay models and connecting it to magnetar-powered supernovae.
Findings
Blueshifted emission lines indicate asymmetric ejecta or jet-like structures.
Low late-phase luminosity constrains 56Ni mass to less than 0.08 solar masses.
Magnetar model explains the supernova's luminosity and spectral features.
Abstract
Late phase nebular spectra and photometry of Type Ib Supernova (SN) 2005bf taken by the Subaru telescope at ~ 270 and ~ 310 days since the explosion are presented. Emission lines ([OI]6300, 6363, [CaII]7291, 7324, [FeII]7155) show the blueshift of ~ 1,500 - 2,000 km s-1. The [OI] doublet shows a doubly-peaked profile. The line luminosities can be interpreted as coming from a blob or jet containing only ~ 0.1 - 0.4 Msun, in which ~ 0.02 - 0.06 Msun is 56Ni synthesized at the explosion. To explain the blueshift, the blob should either be of unipolar moving at the center-of-mass velocity v ~ 2,000 - 5,000 km s-1, or suffer from self-absorption within the ejecta as seen in SN 1990I. In both interpretations, the low-mass blob component dominates the optical output both at the first peak (~ 20 days) and at the late phase (~ 300 days). The low luminosity at the late phase (the absolute R…
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