The Type II supernovae 2006V and 2006au: two SN 1987A-like events
F. Taddia, M. D. Stritzinger, J. Sollerman, M. M. Phillips, J. P., Anderson, M. Ergon, G. Folatelli, C. Fransson, W. Freedman, M. Hamuy, N., Morrell, A. Pastorello, S. E. Persson, S. Gonzalez

TL;DR
This study analyzes two supernovae similar to SN 1987A, revealing they are likely blue supergiants with higher explosion energies, and provides detailed light curves, spectra, and progenitor property estimates.
Contribution
It presents detailed observations and modeling of two SN 1987A-like supernovae, expanding understanding of their progenitors and explosion characteristics.
Findings
Both supernovae are bluer, hotter, and brighter than SN 1987A.
They exhibit a slow rise to maximum light similar to SN 1987A.
Estimated progenitor properties include ~20 solar masses and radii of 75-100 solar radii.
Abstract
Supernova 1987A revealed that a blue supergiant (BSG) star can end its life as a core-collapse supernova (SN). SN 1987A and other similar objects exhibit properties that distinguish them from ordinary Type II Plateau (IIP) SNe, whose progenitors are believed to be red supergiants (RSGs). Similarities among 1987A-like events include a long rise to maximum, early luminosity fainter than that of normal Type IIP SNe, and radioactivity acting as the primary source powering the light curves. We present and analyze two SNe monitored by the Carnegie Supernova Project that are reminiscent of SN 1987A. Optical and near-infrared (NIR) light curves, and optical spectroscopy of SNe 2006V and 2006au are presented. These observations are compared to those of SN 1987A, and are used to estimate properties of their progenitors. Both objects exhibit a slow rise to maximum and light curve evolution similar…
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