Early phase observations of extremely luminous Type Ia Supernova 2009dc
M. Yamanaka, K. S. Kawabata, K. Kinugasa, M. Tanaka, A. Imada, K., Maeda, K. Nomoto, A. Arai, S. Chiyonobu, Y. Fukazawa, O. Hashimoto, S. Honda,, Y. Ikejiri, R. Itoh, Y. Kamata, N. Kawai, T. Komatsu, D. Kuroda, H. Miyamoto,, S. Miyazaki, O. Nagae, H. Nakaya, T. Ohsugi

TL;DR
This paper reports early observations of the extremely luminous Type Ia supernova 2009dc, highlighting its slow decline, high luminosity, and spectral features suggesting a super-Chandrasekhar mass origin.
Contribution
It provides detailed early phase optical and near-infrared data for SN 2009dc, establishing its status as a superluminous, possibly super-Chandrasekhar mass, Type Ia supernova with unique spectral characteristics.
Findings
SN 2009dc is among the most luminous SNe Ia in optical and near-infrared.
The ejected 56Ni mass is estimated at 1.2-1.6 solar masses.
Presence of unburned carbon suggests thick C+O layers after explosion.
Abstract
We present early phase observations in optical and near-infrared wavelengths for the extremely luminous Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2009dc. The decline rate of the light curve is , which is one of the slowest among SNe Ia. The peak -band absolute magnitude is mag even if the host extinction is mag. It reaches mag for the host extinction of mag as inferred from the observed Na {\sc i} D line absorption in the host. Our -band photometry shows that the SN is one of the most luminous SNe Ia also in near-infrared wavelengths. These results indicate that SN 2009dc belongs to the most luminous class of SNe Ia, like SN 2003fg and SN 2006gz. We estimate the ejected Ni mass of for no host extinction case (or 1.6 0.4 M for the host extinction of…
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