SN 2008S: A Cool Super-Eddington Wind in a Supernova Impostor
Nathan Smith, Mohan Ganeshalingam, Ryan Chornock, Alexei V., Filippenko, Weidong Li, Jeffrey M. Silverman, Thea N. Steele, Christopher V., Griffith, Niels Joubert, Nicholas Y. Lee, Thomas B. Lowe, Martin P., Mobberley, Dustin M. Winslow

TL;DR
SN2008S is identified as a supernova impostor with a super-Eddington wind, resembling LBV eruptions, rather than a true supernova, based on its luminosity, spectral features, and slow outflow speeds.
Contribution
This paper presents detailed photometry and spectroscopy of SN2008S, proposing it as a supernova impostor with a super-Eddington wind, expanding understanding of progenitors with lower initial masses.
Findings
SN2008S has a peak luminosity of M_R = -13.9 mag.
Its spectral features resemble those of the hypergiant IRC+10420.
The event ejected approximately 0.05-0.2 solar masses.
Abstract
We present visual-wavelength photometry and spectroscopy of supernova SN2008S. Based on the low peak luminosity for a SN of M_R = -13.9 mag, photometric and spectral evolution unlike that of low-luminosity SNe, a late-time decline rate slower than 56Co decay, and slow outflow speeds of 600-1000 km/s, we conclude that SN2008S is not a true core-collapse SN and is probably not an electron-capture SN. Instead, we show that SN2008S more closely resembles a "SN impostor" event like SN1997bs, analogous to the giant eruptions of LBVs. Its total radiated energy was 1e47.8 ergs, and it may have ejected 0.05-0.2 Msun in the event. We discover an uncanny similarity between the spectrum of SN 2008S and that of the Galactic hypergiant IRC+10420, which is dominated by narrow H-alpha, [Ca II], and Ca II emission lines formed in an opaque wind. We propose a scenario where the vastly super-Eddington…
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