Calcium-rich gap transients in the remote outskirts of galaxies
Mansi M. Kasliwal, S. R. Kulkarni, Avishay Gal-Yam, Peter E. Nugent,, Mark Sullivan, Lars Bildsten, Ofer Yaron, Hagai B. Perets, Iair Arcavi, Sagi, Ben-Ami, Varun B. Bhalerao, Joshua S. Bloom, S. Bradley Cenko, Alexei V., Filippenko, Dale A. Frail, Mohan Ganeshalingam

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new class of calcium-rich transients with unique luminosity, spectral, and host galaxy properties, suggesting a novel explosion mechanism distinct from standard supernovae.
Contribution
It introduces and characterizes calcium-rich gap transients, revealing their distinct properties and proposing potential progenitor scenarios, expanding understanding of explosive stellar phenomena.
Findings
Transients have peak luminosity between novae and supernovae.
All members are offset from their host galaxy centers.
Spectra show unusual nebular calcium-dominated features.
Abstract
From the first two seasons of the Palomar Transient Factory, we identify three peculiar transients (PTF09dav, PTF10iuv, PTF11bij) with five distinguishing characteristics: peak luminosity in the gap between novae and supernovae (M_R = 15.5 to -16.5), rapid photometric evolution (rise-time ~12--15 days), large photospheric velocities (~6000 to 11000 km/s), early spectroscopic evolution into nebular phase (~1 to 3 months) and peculiar nebular spectra dominated by Calcium. We also culled the extensive decade-long Lick Observatory Supernova Search database and identified an additional member of this group, SN 2007ke. Our choice of photometric and spectroscopic properties was motivated by SN 2005E (Perets et al. 2010). To our surprise, as in the case of SN 2005E, all four members of this group are also clearly offset from the bulk of their host galaxy. Given the well-sampled early and…
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