High luminosity, slow ejecta and persistent carbon lines: SN 2009dc challenges thermonuclear explosion scenarios
S. Taubenberger, S. Benetti, M. Childress, R. Pakmor, S. Hachinger, P., A. Mazzali, V. Stanishev, N. Elias-Rosa, I. Agnoletto, F. Bufano, M. Ergon,, A. Harutyunyan, C. Inserra, E. Kankare, M. Kromer, H. Navasardyan, J., Nicolas, A. Pastorello, E. Prosperi, F. Salgado

TL;DR
SN 2009dc is an overluminous Type Ia supernova with slow ejecta, persistent carbon lines, and features suggesting a super-Chandrasekhar mass, challenging existing thermonuclear explosion models.
Contribution
This paper presents detailed observations and modeling of SN 2009dc, highlighting its unique properties and discussing various explosion scenarios, including super-Chandrasekhar-mass progenitors.
Findings
SN 2009dc produced approximately 1.8 solar masses of 56Ni.
Ejecta mass estimated at around 2.8 solar masses.
Presence of strong C II lines until two weeks post-maximum.
Abstract
SN 2009dc shares similarities with normal Type Ia supernovae, but is clearly overluminous, with a (pseudo-bolometric) peak luminosity of log(L) = 43.47 [erg/s]. Its light curves decline slowly over half a year after maximum light, and the early-time near-IR light curves show secondary maxima, although the minima between the first and second peaks are not very pronounced. Bluer bands exhibit an enhanced fading after ~200 d, which might be caused by dust formation or an unexpectedly early IR catastrophe. The spectra of SN 2009dc are dominated by intermediate-mass elements and unburned material at early times, and by iron-group elements at late phases. Strong C II lines are present until ~2 weeks past maximum, which is unprecedented in thermonuclear SNe. The ejecta velocities are significantly lower than in normal and even subluminous SNe Ia. No signatures of CSM interaction are found in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
