SN 2006bt: A Perplexing, Troublesome, and Possibly Misleading Type Ia Supernova
Ryan J. Foley, Gautham Narayan, Peter J. Challis, Alexei V., Filippenko, Robert P. Kirshner, Jeffrey M. Silverman, Thea N. Steele

TL;DR
SN 2006bt is a peculiar Type Ia supernova with conflicting features that challenge standard models, potentially biasing cosmological measurements if not properly identified.
Contribution
This paper presents detailed observations of SN 2006bt, revealing its unusual properties and highlighting the need to distinguish such objects in cosmological studies.
Findings
SN 2006bt has broad, slowly declining light curves.
Spectra resemble low-luminosity SNe Ia with cool features.
Contamination by similar objects can bias cosmological parameters.
Abstract
SN 2006bt displays characteristics unlike those of any other known Type Ia supernova (SN Ia). We present optical light curves and spectra of SN 2006bt which demonstrate the peculiar nature of this object. SN 2006bt has broad, slowly declining light curves indicative of a hot, high-luminosity SN, but lacks a prominent second maximum in the i band as do low-luminosity SNe Ia. Its spectra are similar to those of low-luminosity SNe Ia, containing features that are only present in cool SN photospheres. Light-curve fitting methods suggest that SN 2006bt is reddened by a significant amount of dust; however, it occurred in the outskirts of its early-type host galaxy and has no strong Na D absorption in any of its spectra, suggesting a negligible amount of host-galaxy dust absorption. C II is possibly detected in our pre-maximum spectra, but at a much lower velocity than other elements. The…
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