Fourteen Months of Observations of the Possible Super-Chandrasekhar Mass Type Ia Supernova 2009dc
Jeffrey M. Silverman (1), Mohan Ganeshalingam (1), Weidong Li (1),, Alexei V. Filippenko (1), Adam A. Miller (1), Dovi Poznanski (1) ((1), Department of Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley, CA)

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed observations and analysis of the super-luminous Type Ia supernova 2009dc, providing evidence for a super-Chandrasekhar mass progenitor and discussing its unique spectral and luminosity features.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed optical photometry and spectra analysis of SN 2009dc, supporting the super-Chandrasekhar mass hypothesis and exploring its progenitor and explosion characteristics.
Findings
SN 2009dc had a very slow light curve evolution with a rise time of ~23 days.
The peak bolometric luminosity was estimated at ~2.4×10^43 erg/s, likely 40% higher.
Spectra showed strong unburned material features and low expansion velocities.
Abstract
In this paper, we present and analyse optical photometry and spectra of the extremely luminous and slowly evolving Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2009dc, and offer evidence that it is a super-Chandrasekhar mass (SC) SN Ia and thus had a SC white dwarf (WD) progenitor. Optical spectra of SN 2007if, a similar object, are also shown. SN 2009dc had one of the most slowly evolving light curves ever observed for a SN Ia, with a rise time of ~23 days and Delta m_15(B) = 0.72 mag. We calculate a lower limit to the peak bolometric luminosity of ~2.4e43 erg/s, though the actual value is likely almost 40% larger. Optical spectra of SN 2009dc and SN 2007if obtained near maximum brightness exhibit strong C II features (indicative of a significant amount of unburned material), and the post-maximum spectra are dominated by iron-group elements. All of our spectra of SN 2009dc and SN 2007if also show low…
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