SN2008am: A Super-Luminous Type IIn Supernova
E. Chatzopoulos, J. Craig Wheeler, J. Vinko, R. Quimby, E. L., Robinson, A. A. Miller, R. J. Foley, D. A. Perley, F. Yuan, C. Akerlof, and, J. S. Bloom

TL;DR
SN 2008am is an extremely luminous Type IIn supernova whose light curve and spectra suggest that its brightness is powered by shock interaction with an optically-thick circumstellar medium, likely from a massive progenitor.
Contribution
This paper provides detailed observations and modeling of SN 2008am, demonstrating that shock diffusion in an optically-thick CSM best explains its luminosity and spectral features, advancing understanding of super-luminous supernovae.
Findings
SN 2008am peaked at -22.3 mag with a luminosity of 3 x 10^{44} erg/s.
Spectra show strong Balmer and He I emission with intermediate widths.
The light curve is best explained by diffusion of shock energy in an optically-thick CSM.
Abstract
We present observations and interpretation of the Type IIn supernova SN 2008am discovered by the ROTSE Supernova Verification Project (RSVP). SN 2008am peaked at approximately -22.3 mag at a redshift of z=0.2338, giving it a peak luminosity of 3 x 10^{44}erg/s and making it one of the most luminous supernovae ever observed. The total radiated energy is ~ 2 x 10^{51} erg. Photometric observations in the ultraviolet, optical and infrared bands (J,H,Ks) constrain the SED evolution. We obtained six optical spectra of the supernova, five on the early decline from maximum light and a sixth nearly a year later plus a very late-time spectrum (~2 yr) of the host galaxy. The spectra of SN 2008am show strong Balmer-line and He I lambda 5876A emission with intermediate widths (~25A) in the first ~40 days after optical maximum. We examine a variety of models for the line wings and conclude that…
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