Type IIb Supernova SN 2011dh: Spectra and Photometry from the Ultraviolet to the Near-Infrared
G. H. "Howie'' Marion, Jozsef Vinko, Robert P. Kirshner, Ryan J., Foley, Perry Berlind, Allyson Bieryla, Joshua S. Bloom, Michael L. Calkins,, Peter Challis, Roger A. Chevalier, Ryan Chornock, Chris Culliton, Jason L., Curtis, Gilbert A. Esquerdo, Mark E. Everett

TL;DR
This paper presents comprehensive UV to NIR spectra and photometry of SN 2011dh, revealing its composition, kinematics, and light curve evolution, and compares it with other Type IIb supernovae to understand progenitor properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength spectral and photometric analysis of SN 2011dh, including velocity measurements and bolometric light curves, enhancing understanding of Type IIb supernovae.
Findings
Helium appears in the atmosphere as early as 11 days after explosion.
SN 2011dh's H-shell is significantly less massive than SN 1993J's.
Light curves show similar peak luminosities and decline rates among SN IIb.
Abstract
We report spectroscopic and photometric observations of the Type IIb SN 2011dh obtained between 4 and 34 days after the estimated date of explosion (May 31.5 UT). The data cover a wide wavelength range from 2,000 Angstroms in the UV to 2.4 microns in the NIR. Optical spectra provide line profiles and velocity measurements of HI, HeI, CaII and FeII that trace the composition and kinematics of the SN. NIR spectra show that helium is present in the atmosphere as early as 11 days after the explosion. A UV spectrum obtained with the STIS reveals that the UV flux for SN 2011dh is low compared to other SN IIb. The HI and HeI velocities in SN 2011dh are separated by about 4,000 km/s at all phases. We estimate that the H-shell of SN 2011dh is about 8 times less massive than the shell of SN 1993J and about 3 times more massive than the shell of SN 2008ax. Light curves (LC) for twelve passbands…
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