Massive stars exploding in a He-rich circumstellar medium. V. Observations of the slow-evolving SN Ibn OGLE-2012-SN-006
A. Pastorello, L. Wyrzykowski, S. Valenti, J. L. Prieto, S. Kozlowski,, A. Udalski, N. Elias-Rosa, A. Morales-Garoffolo, J. P. Anderson, S. Benetti,, M. Bersten, M. T. Botticella, E. Cappellaro, G. Fasano, M. Fraser, A., Gal-Yam, M. Gillone, M. L. Graham, J. Greiner

TL;DR
This paper reports detailed optical observations of the peculiar Type Ibn supernova OGLE-2012-SN-006, highlighting its slow evolution, spectral features, and evidence of interaction with a helium-rich circumstellar medium, supporting a core-collapse origin.
Contribution
First detailed optical and spectroscopic study of OGLE-2012-SN-006, revealing its unique light curve and spectral properties among Type Ibn supernovae.
Findings
Light curve peaks at M(I) = -19.65 with a two-week rise.
Spectra show He I lines and features indicating ejecta-CSM interaction.
Spectral features suggest a core-collapse supernova with helium-rich circumstellar material.
Abstract
We present optical observations of the peculiar Type Ibn supernova (SN Ibn) OGLE-2012-SN-006, discovered and monitored by the OGLE-IV survey, and spectroscopically followed by PESSTO at late phases. Stringent pre-discovery limits constrain the explosion epoch with fair precision to JD = 2456203.8 +- 4.0. The rise time to the I-band light curve maximum is about two weeks. The object reaches the peak absolute magnitude M(I) = -19.65 +- 0.19 on JD = 2456218.1 +- 1.8. After maximum, the light curve declines for about 25 days with a rate of 4 mag per 100d. The symmetric I-band peak resembles that of canonical Type Ib/c supernovae (SNe), whereas SNe Ibn usually exhibit asymmetric and narrower early-time light curves. Since 25 days past maximum, the light curve flattens with a decline rate slower than that of the 56Co to 56Fe decay, although at very late phases it steepens to approach that…
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.
