Comparison of progenitor mass estimates for the type IIP SN 2012A
L. Tomasella, E. Cappellaro, M. Fraser, M.L. Pumo, A. Pastorello, G., Pignata, S. Benetti, F. Bufano, M. Dennefeld, A. Harutyunyan, T. Iijima, A., Jerkstrand, E. Kankare, R. Kotak, L. Magill, V. Nascimbeni, P. Ochner, A., Siviero, S. Smartt, J. Sollerman, V. Stanishev, F. Taddia

TL;DR
This study analyzes SN 2012A's photometric and spectroscopic data, estimates its progenitor mass, and compares different methods for progenitor mass determination, providing insights into the properties of a typical Type IIP supernova.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive comparison of progenitor mass estimates using observational data and hydrodynamical modeling for SN 2012A, a nearby Type IIP supernova.
Findings
Progenitor mass estimated at ~10.5 Msun from archival images.
Hydrodynamical modeling suggests ejecta mass of 12.5 Msun.
Spectral features indicate an intermediate-mass progenitor.
Abstract
We present the one-year long observing campaign of SN 2012A which exploded in the nearby (9.8 Mpc) irregular galaxy NGC 3239. The photometric evolution is that of a normal type IIP supernova. The absolute maximum magnitude, with MB = -16.23 +- 0.16 mag. SN2012A reached a peak luminosity of about 2X10**42 erg/s, which is brighter than those of other SNe with a similar 56Ni mass. The latter was estimated from the luminosity in the exponential tail of the light curve and found to be M(56Ni) = 0.011 +-0.004 Msun. The spectral evolution of SN 2012A is also typical of SN IIP, from the early spectra dominated by a blue continuum and very broad (~10**4 km/s) Balmer lines, to the late-photospheric spectra characterized by prominent P-Cygni features of metal lines (Fe II, Sc II, Ba II, Ti II, Ca II, Na ID). The photospheric velocity is moderately low, ~3X10**3 km/s at 50 days, for the low optical…
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