Extensive HST Ultraviolet Spectra and Multi-wavelength Observations of SN 2014J in M82 Indicate Reddening and Circumstellar Scattering by Typical Dust
Ryan J. Foley, O. D. Fox, C. McCully, M. M. Phillips, D. J. Sand, W., Zheng, P. Challis, A. V. Filippenko, G. Folatelli, W. Hillebrandt, E. Y., Hsiao, S. W. Jha, R. P. Kirshner, M. Kromer, G. H. Marion, M. Nelson, R., Pakmor, G. Pignata, F. K. Roepke, I. R. Seitenzahl

TL;DR
This study combines multi-wavelength observations of SN 2014J to reveal that its reddening and faintness are due to a mix of interstellar dust reddening and circumstellar scattering, challenging simpler extinction models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the dust and circumstellar environment affecting SN 2014J using extensive spectral and photometric data, introducing a combined reddening and scattering model.
Findings
Approximately half of the extinction is from interstellar dust reddening.
The other half of the extinction is due to scattering by circumstellar dust.
The dust properties suggest a mix of typical interstellar and LMC-like dust in the circumstellar environment.
Abstract
SN 2014J in M82 is the closest detected Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) in at least 28 years and perhaps in 410 years. Despite its small distance of 3.3 Mpc, SN 2014J is surprisingly faint, peaking at V = 10.6 mag, and assuming a typical SN Ia luminosity, we infer an observed visual extinction of A_V = 2.0 +/- 0.1 mag. But this picture, with R_V = 1.6 +/- 0.2, is too simple to account for all observations. We combine 10 epochs (spanning a month) of HST/STIS ultraviolet through near-infrared spectroscopy with HST/WFC3, KAIT, and FanCam photometry from the optical to the infrared and 9 epochs of high-resolution TRES spectroscopy to investigate the sources of extinction and reddening for SN 2014J. We argue that the wide range of observed properties for SN 2014J is caused by a combination of dust reddening, likely originating in the interstellar medium of M82, and scattering off circumstellar…
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