Dust and the type II-plateau supernova 2004et
Rubina Kotak (1), Peter Meikle (2), Duncan Farrah (3), Christopher, Gerardy (4), Ryan Foley (5), Schuyler van Dyk (6), Claes Fransson (7), Peter, Lundqvist (7), Jesper Sollerman (7,8), Robert Fesen (9), Alex Filippenko (5),, Seppo Mattila (10), Jeffrey Silverman (5)

TL;DR
This study presents detailed mid-infrared observations of supernova 2004et, revealing dust formation, ejecta interaction, and IR echoes, challenging the idea that supernovae produce most of the dust in early galaxies.
Contribution
First spectroscopic evidence of silicate dust formation in supernova ejecta and analysis of dust mass growth and distribution in SN 2004et.
Findings
Detected silicate dust in ejecta for the first time.
Ejecta dust mass grew to a few times 10^(-4) solar masses.
Ejecta interacted with circumstellar medium, affecting IR and optical signatures.
Abstract
We present mid-infrared (MIR) observations of the Type II-plateau supernova (SN) 2004et, obtained with the {\it Spitzer Space Telescope} between days 64 and 1406 past explosion. Late-time optical spectra are also presented. For the period 300-795 days past explosion, we argue that the spectral energy distribution of SN 2004et comprises (a) a hot component due to emission from optically thick gas, as well as free-bound radiation, (b) a warm component due to newly formed, radioactively heated dust in the ejecta, and (c) a cold component due to an IR echo from the interstellar-medium dust of the host galaxy, NGC 6946. There may also have been a small contribution to the IR SED due to free-free emission from ionised gas in the ejecta. We reveal the first-ever spectroscopic evidence for silicate dust formed in the ejecta of a supernova. This is supported by our detection of a large, but…
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