The host galaxy and late-time evolution of the Super-Luminous Supernova PTF12dam
T.-W. Chen, S. J. Smartt, A. Jerkstrand, M. Nicholl, F. Bresolin, R., Kotak, J. Polshaw, A. Rest, R. Kudritzki, Z. Zheng, N. Elias-Rosa, K. Smith,, C. Inserra, D. Wright, E. Kankare, T. Kangas, M. Fraser

TL;DR
This paper studies the super-luminous supernova PTF12dam, analyzing its lightcurve and host galaxy, and evaluates models like magnetar and CSM interaction to explain its properties, highlighting the importance of low metallicity environments.
Contribution
It provides detailed photometry, spectroscopy, and modeling of PTF12dam, demonstrating the magnetar model's fit and emphasizing the role of low metallicity in SLSN Ic occurrence.
Findings
Magnetar model fits the lightcurve with gamma-ray escape.
Pair-instability models do not fit the data well.
Host galaxy is a low-metallicity, star-forming dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
Super-luminous supernovae of type Ic have a tendency to occur in faint host galaxies which are likely to have low mass and low metallicity. PTF12dam is one of the closest and best studied super-luminous explosions that has a broad and slowly fading lightcurve similar to SN 2007bi. Here we present new photometry and spectroscopy for PTF12dam from 200-500 days (rest-frame) after peak and a detailed analysis of the host galaxy (SDSS J142446.21+461348.6 at z = 0.107). Using deep templates and image subtraction we show that the full lightcurve can be fit with a magnetar model if escape of high-energy gamma rays is taken into account. The full bolometric lightcurve from -53 to +399 days (with respect to peak) cannot be fit satisfactorily with the pair-instability models. An alternative model of interaction with a dense CSM produces a good fit to the data although this requires a very large…
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