The hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova iPTF13ajg and its host galaxy in absorption and emission
Paul M. Vreeswijk, Sandra Savaglio, Avishay Gal-Yam, Annalisa De Cia,, Robert M. Quimby, Mark Sullivan, S. Bradley Cenko, Daniel A. Perley, Alexei, V. Filippenko, Kelsey I. Clubb, Francesco Taddia, Jesper Sollerman, Giorgos, Leloudas, Iair Arcavi, Adam Rubin, Mansi M. Kasliwal

TL;DR
This paper reports on the detailed observation and analysis of the most luminous hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova iPTF13ajg at redshift 0.7403, including its light curves, spectra, and host galaxy environment, revealing insights into its energy output and surroundings.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-epoch spectroscopic and photometric study of iPTF13ajg, characterizing its luminosity, spectral features, and host galaxy environment, and comparing its environment to gamma-ray bursts.
Findings
Peak luminosity of 3.2x10^44 erg/s.
Host galaxy has low star formation rate (<0.07 Msun/yr).
Environment differs from GRB progenitors based on absorption lines.
Abstract
We present imaging and spectroscopy of a hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova (SLSN) discovered by the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory: iPTF13ajg. At a redshift of z=0.7403, derived from narrow absorption lines, iPTF13ajg peaked at an absolute magnitude M(u,AB)=-22.5, one of the most luminous supernovae to date. The uBgRiz light curves, obtained with the P48, P60, NOT, DCT, and Keck telescopes, and the nine-epoch spectral sequence secured with the Keck and the VLT (covering 3 rest-frame months), are tied together photometrically to provide an estimate of the flux evolution as a function of time and wavelength. The observed bolometric peak luminosity of iPTF13ajg is 3.2x10^44 erg/s, while the estimated total radiated energy is 1.3x10^51 erg. We detect narrow absorption lines of Mg I, Mg II, and Fe II, associated with the cold interstellar medium in the host galaxy, at two…
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