Early-type host galaxies of Type II and Ib Supernovae
Hyewon Suh, Sung-chul Yoon, Hyunjin Jeong, Sukyoung K. Yi

TL;DR
This study investigates early-type galaxies hosting Type II and Ib supernovae, revealing recent star formation and supporting the idea that these supernovae originate from massive stars, contrary to previous assumptions.
Contribution
It provides new evidence linking early-type galaxy supernovae to recent star formation and massive star progenitors using multi-wavelength data analysis.
Findings
SN II/Ib host galaxies are bluer than SN Ia hosts.
Most SN II/Ib hosts show signs of recent star formation.
Results support core-collapse origin for SNe II/Ib in early-type galaxies.
Abstract
Recent studies find that some early-type galaxies host Type II or Ibc supernovae (SNe II, Ibc). This may imply recent star-formation activities in these SNe host galaxies, but a massive star origin of the SNe Ib so far observed in early-type galaxies has been questioned because of their intrinsic faintness and unusually strong Ca lines shown in the nebular phase. To address the issue, we investigate the properties of early-type SNe host galaxies using the data with Galaxy Evolution Explore(GALEX) ultraviolet photometry, and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) optical data. Our sample includes eight SNe II and one peculiar SN Ib (SN 2000ds) host galaxies as well as 32 SN Ia host galaxies. The host galaxy of SN 2005cz, another peculiar SN Ib, is also analysed using the GALEX data and the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) optical data. We find that the NUV-optical colors of SN II/Ib…
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