PS1-10afx at z=1.388: Pan-STARRS1 Discovery of a New Type of Superluminous Supernova
Ryan Chornock, E. Berger, A. Rest, D. Milisavljevic, R. Lunnan, R. J., Foley, A. M. Soderberg, S. J. Smartt, A. J. Burgasser, P. Challis, L., Chomiuk, I. Czekala, M. Drout, W. Fong, M. E. Huber, R. P. Kirshner, C., Leibler, B. McLeod, G. H. Marion, G. Narayan, A. G. Riess

TL;DR
The discovery of PS1-10afx reveals a new type of hydrogen-deficient superluminous supernova with unique spectral, photometric, and host galaxy properties that challenge existing theoretical models.
Contribution
This paper reports the first detection of PS1-10afx, a superluminous supernova with unprecedented properties, indicating a different origin than previously known H-poor SLSNe.
Findings
Peaked at M_u = -22.3 mag, one of the most luminous SNe
Fast rise time of ~12 days to peak luminosity
Host galaxy is a fairly massive, star-forming galaxy
Abstract
We present the Pan-STARRS1 discovery of PS1-10afx, a unique hydrogen-deficient superluminous supernova (SLSN) at z=1.388. The light curve peaked at z_P1=21.7 mag, making PS1-10afx comparable to the most luminous known SNe, with M_u = -22.3 mag. Our extensive optical and NIR observations indicate that the bolometric light curve of PS1-10afx rose on the unusually fast timescale of ~12 d to the extraordinary peak luminosity of 4.1e44 erg/s (M_bol = -22.8 mag) and subsequently faded rapidly. Equally important, the SED is unusually red for a SLSN, with a color temperature of 6800 K near maximum light, in contrast to previous H-poor SLSNe, which are bright in the UV. The spectra more closely resemble those of a normal SN Ic than any known SLSN, with a photospheric velocity of 11,000 km/s and evidence for line blanketing in the rest-frame UV. Despite the fast rise, these parameters imply a…
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