DES13S2cmm: The First Superluminous Supernova from the Dark Energy Survey
A. Papadopoulos (1), C. B. D'Andrea (1), M. Sullivan (2), R. C. Nichol, (1), K. Barbary, R. Biswas, P. J. Brown, R. A. Covarrubias, D. A. Finley, J., A. Fischer, R. J. Foley, D. Goldstein, R. R. Gupta, R. Kessler, E. Kovacs, S., E. Kuhlmann, C. Lidman, M. March, P. E. Nugent

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of DES13S2cmm, the first superluminous supernova from the Dark Energy Survey, highlighting its unique light curve features, host galaxy properties, and the challenges in modeling its physical mechanisms.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of a superluminous supernova from DES, with detailed light curve analysis and comparison to models, advancing understanding of SLSNe-I.
Findings
DES13S2cmm is among the slowest declining SLSNe-I.
It is the faintest at peak among studied SLSNe-I.
Bolometric light curves show low dispersion, useful for standardization.
Abstract
We present DES13S2cmm, the first spectroscopically-confirmed superluminous supernova (SLSN) from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). We briefly discuss the data and search algorithm used to find this event in the first year of DES operations, and outline the spectroscopic data obtained from the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Very Large Telescope to confirm its redshift (z = 0.663 +/- 0.001 based on the host-galaxy emission lines) and likely spectral type (type I). Using this redshift, we find M_U_peak = -21.05 +0.10 -0.09 for the peak, rest-frame U-band absolute magnitude, and find DES13S2cmm to be located in a faint, low metallicity (sub-solar), low stellar-mass host galaxy (log(M/M_sun) = 9.3 +/- 0.3); consistent with what is seen for other SLSNe-I. We compare the bolometric light curve of DES13S2cmm to fourteen similarly well-observed SLSNe-I in the literature and find it possesses…
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.
