Optical and near-infrared observations of SN 2011dh - The first 100 days
M. Ergon, J. Sollerman, M. Fraser, A. Pastorello, S. Taubenberger, N., Elias-Rosa, M. Bersten, A. Jerkstrand, S. Benetti, M.T. Botticella, C., Fransson, A. Harutyunyan, R. Kotak, S. Smartt, S. Valenti, F. Bufano, E., Cappellaro, M. Fiaschi, A. Howell, E. Kankare, L. Magill

TL;DR
This paper presents comprehensive optical, NIR, UV, and MIR observations of SN 2011dh over 100 days, analyzing spectral evolution, ejecta properties, and progenitor confirmation through multi-wavelength data and modeling.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral and photometric analysis of SN 2011dh, confirming the progenitor star and constraining hydrogen envelope mass using multi-wavelength observations and hydrodynamical modeling.
Findings
Hydrogen lines never fall below ~11000 km/s, indicating the core-envelope interface location.
Hydrogen mass estimated at 0.01-0.04 solar masses consistent with spectral evolution.
Progenitor star confirmed by flux reduction at SN site, matching previous hypotheses.
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared (NIR) photometry and spectroscopy of the Type IIb supernova (SN) 2011dh for the first 100 days. We complement our extensive dataset with SWIFT ultra-violet (UV) and Spitzer mid-infrared (MIR) data to build a UV to MIR bolometric lightcurve using both photometric and spectroscopic data. Hydrodynamical modelling of the SN based on this bolometric lightcurve have been presented in Bersten (2012). We find that the absorption minimum for the hydrogen lines is never seen below ~11000 km/s but approaches this value as the lines get weaker. This suggests that the interface between the helium core and hydrogen rich envelope is located near this velocity in agreement with the Bersten et al. (2012) He4R270 ejecta model. Spectral modelling of the hydrogen lines using this ejecta model supports the conclusion and we find a hydrogen mass of 0.01-0.04 solar masses…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
