Type II supernova energetics and comparison of light curves to shock-cooling models
Adam Rubin, Avishay Gal-Yam, Annalisa De Cia, Assaf Horesh, Danny, Khazov, Eran O. Ofek, S. R. Kulkarni, Iair Arcavi, Ilan Manulis, Ofer Yaron,, Paul Vreeswijk, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Sagi Ben-Ami, Daniel A. Perley, Yi Cao, S., Bradley Cenko, Umaa D. Rebbapragada, P. R. Wo\'zniak

TL;DR
This study analyzes early optical light curves of 57 Type II supernovae to estimate explosion energies, revealing a wide energy range and correlations with nickel production and light curve features, enhancing understanding of supernova physics.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of early-time optical light curves of Type II supernovae to estimate explosion energies and explore their correlations with other properties.
Findings
Explosion energies vary widely, with E/M spanning (0.2-20)×10^{51} erg/(10 M_sun).
E/M correlates positively with nickel production, supporting recent core-collapse models.
Faster declining supernovae are more luminous, with longer rise times, constraining power source models.
Abstract
During the first few days after explosion, Type II supernovae (SNe) are dominated by relatively simple physics. Theoretical predictions regarding early-time SN light curves in the ultraviolet (UV) and optical bands are thus quite robust. We present, for the first time, a sample of -band Type II SN light curves that are well monitored during their rise, having detections during the first 10 days after discovery, and a well-constrained time of explosion to within days. We show that the energy per unit mass () can be deduced to roughly a factor of five by comparing early-time optical data to the model of Rabinak & Waxman (2011), while the progenitor radius cannot be determined based on -band data alone. We find that Type II SN explosion energies span a range of ), and have a mean energy per unit mass of…
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.
