Properties of Newly Formed Dust Grains in The Luminous Type IIn Supernova 2010jl
K. Maeda, T. Nozawa, D.K. Sahu, Y. Minowa, K. Motohara, I. Ueno, G., Folatelli, T.-S. Pyo, Y. Kitagawa, K.S. Kawabata, G.C. Anupama, T. Kozasa,, T.J. Moriya, M. Yamanaka, K. Nomoto, M. Bersten, R. Quimby, M. Iye

TL;DR
This study presents optical to NIR spectra of SN 2010jl, revealing newly formed hot carbon dust grains with specific properties, supporting dense CSM interaction as a key factor in luminous Type IIn supernovae dust production.
Contribution
It provides the first clear detection and characterization of newly formed dust in a luminous Type IIn supernova, linking dust formation to dense CSM interaction and LBV-like eruptions.
Findings
Detection of thermal emission from hot carbon dust grains.
Estimated dust mass of approximately 8 x 10^{-4} solar masses.
Inhomogeneous, clumpy dust distribution in the supernova environment.
Abstract
Supernovae (SNe) have been proposed to be the main production sites of dust grains in the Universe. Our knowledge on their importance to dust production is, however, limited by observationally poor constraints on the nature and amount of dust particles produced by individual SNe. In this paper, we present a spectrum covering optical through near-Infrared (NIR) light of the luminous Type IIn supernova (SN IIn) 2010jl around one and half years after the explosion. This unique data set reveals multiple signatures of newly formed dust particles. The NIR portion of the spectrum provides a rare example where thermal emission from newly formed hot dust grains is clearly detected. We determine the main population of the dust species to be carbon grains at a temperature of ~1,350 - 1,450K at this epoch. The mass of the dust grains is derived to be ~(7.5 - 8.5) x 10^{-4} Msun. Hydrogen emission…
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.
