OISTER Optical and Near-Infrared Observations of the Super-Chandrasekhar Supernova Candidate SN 2012dn: Dust Emission from the Circumstellar Shell
Masayuki Yamanaka, Keiichi Maeda, Masaomi Tanaka, Nozomu Tominaga,, Koji S. Kawabata, Katsutoshi Takaki, Miho Kawabata, Tatsuya Nakaoka, Issei, Ueno, Hiroshi Akitaya, Takahiro Nagayama, Jun Takahashi, Satoshi Honda,, Toshihiro Omodaka, Ryo Miyanoshita, Takashi Nagao

TL;DR
This study presents detailed optical and near-infrared observations of the super-Chandrasekhar supernova candidate SN 2012dn, revealing dust emission from circumstellar material and supporting a single-degenerate progenitor scenario.
Contribution
It provides extensive multi-wavelength data on SN 2012dn, demonstrating dust echoes and constraining progenitor models, which advances understanding of super-Chandrasekhar supernovae.
Findings
NIR excesses observed from 30 days post-maximum indicating dust echoes.
No early emission lines suggest lack of ejecta-CSM interaction.
Progenitor likely a recurrent nova system within a single-degenerate scenario.
Abstract
We present extensively dense observations of the super-Chandrasekhar supernova (SC SN) candidate SN 2012dn from to days after the date of its -band maximum in the optical and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths conducted through the OISTER ToO program. The NIR light curves and color evolutions up to 35 days after the -band maximum provided an excellent match with those of another SC SN 2009dc, providing a further support to the nature of SN 2012dn as a SC SN. We found that SN 2012dn exhibited strong excesses in the NIR wavelengths from days after the -band maximum. The and -band light curves exhibited much later maximum dates at and days after the -band maximum, respectively, compared with those of normal SNe Ia. The and -band light curves subtracted by those of SN 2009dc displayed plateaued evolutions, indicating a NIR echo from…
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.
