SN 2008ha: An Extremely Low Luminosity and Extremely Low Energy Supernova
Ryan J. Foley, Ryan Chornock, Alexei V. Filippenko, Mohan, Ganeshalingam, Robert P. Kirshner, Weidong Li, S. Bradley Cenko, Pete, Challis, Andrew S. Friedman, Maryam Modjaz, Jeffrey M. Silverman, W. Michael, Wood-Vasey

TL;DR
SN 2008ha is an extremely faint and low-energy supernova, providing insights into the diversity of Type Ia-like supernovae and challenging existing explosion models.
Contribution
This paper presents detailed observations of SN 2008ha, the faintest supernova of its class, and discusses its implications for supernova explosion mechanisms.
Findings
SN 2008ha had the lowest luminosity among observed supernovae.
It ejected only 0.15 solar masses of material.
The supernova had a kinetic energy of approximately 2 x 10^48 ergs.
Abstract
We present ultraviolet, optical, and near-infrared photometry as well as optical spectra of the peculiar supernova (SN) 2008ha. SN 2008ha had a very low peak luminosity, reaching only M_V = -14.2 mag, and low line velocities of only ~2000 km/s near maximum brightness, indicating a very small kinetic energy per unit mass of ejecta. Spectroscopically, SN 2008ha is a member of the SN 2002cx-like class of SNe, a peculiar subclass of SNe Ia; however, SN 2008ha is the most extreme member, being significantly fainter and having lower line velocities than the typical member, which is already ~2 mag fainter and has line velocities ~5000 km/s smaller (near maximum brightness) than a normal SN Ia. SN 2008ha had a remarkably short rise time of only ~10 days, significantly shorter than either SN 2002cx-like objects (~15 days) or normal SNe Ia (~19.5 days). The bolometric light curve of SN 2008ha…
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