SN 2008iy: An Unusual Type IIn Supernova with an Enduring 400 Day Rise Time
A. A. Miller (1), J. M. Silverman (1), N. R. Butler (1), J. S. Bloom, (1), R. Chornock (1, 2), A. V. Filippenko (1), M. Ganeshalingam (1), C. R., Klein (1), W. Li (1), P. E. Nugent (3), N. Smith (1), T. N. Steele (1) ((1), UC Berkeley, (2) Harvard CfA, (3) LBNL)

TL;DR
SN 2008iy is an extraordinary Type IIn supernova with an exceptionally long 400-day rise time, likely powered by interaction with a dense, clumpy circumstellar medium, indicating recent LBV-like eruptions before explosion.
Contribution
This paper reports the first supernova with a rise time exceeding 100 days, linking its prolonged brightness to episodic mass loss similar to luminous blue variable stars.
Findings
SN 2008iy's rise time is ~400 days, longer than any previously observed supernova.
The supernova's luminosity is driven by ejecta interaction with a dense, clumpy circumstellar medium.
Progenitor likely experienced LBV-like eruptions within a century before explosion.
Abstract
We present spectroscopic and photometric observations of the Type IIn supernova (SN) 2008iy. SN 2008iy showed an unprecedentedly long rise time of ~400 days, making it the first SN to take significantly longer than 100 days to reach peak optical luminosity. The peak absolute magnitude of SN 2008iy was M_r ~ -19.1 mag, and the total radiated energy over the first ~700 days was ~2 x 10^50 erg. Spectroscopically, SN 2008iy is very similar to the Type IIn SN 1988Z at late times, and, like SN 1988Z, it is a luminous X-ray source (both supernovae had an X-ray luminosity L_ X > 10^41 erg/s). The Halpha emission profile of SN 2008iy shows a narrow P Cygni absorption component, implying a pre-SN wind speed of ~100 km/s. We argue that the luminosity of SN 2008iy is powered via the interaction of the SN ejecta with a dense, clumpy circumstellar medium. The ~400 day rise time can be understood if…
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