SPIRITS 15c and SPIRITS 14buu: Two Obscured Supernovae in the Nearby Star-Forming Galaxy IC 2163
Jacob E. Jencson, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Joel Johansson, Carlos Contreras,, Sergio Castell\'on, Howard E. Bond, Andrew J. Monson, Frank J. Masci, Ann, Marie Cody, Jennifer E. Andrews, John Bally, Yi Cao, Ori D. Fox, Timothy, Gburek, Robert D. Gehrz, Wayne Green, George Helou

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two obscured supernovae in the galaxy IC 2163 using infrared observations, revealing that many nearby core-collapse supernovae may be missed by optical surveys due to dust obscuration.
Contribution
It presents the identification and analysis of two luminous, dust-obscured supernovae in IC 2163, highlighting the importance of infrared surveys in detecting hidden stellar explosions.
Findings
Both supernovae are heavily obscured by dust, affecting their optical visibility.
Infrared observations reveal supernova characteristics consistent with Type IIb and Type IIP.
Potentially over 18% of nearby core-collapse supernovae are missed by optical surveys due to dust obscuration.
Abstract
SPIRITS---SPitzer InfraRed Intensive Transients Survey---is an ongoing survey of nearby galaxies searching for infrared (IR) transients with Spitzer/IRAC. We present the discovery and follow-up observations of one of our most luminous ( mag, Vega) and red ( mag) transients, SPIRITS 15c. The transient was detected in a dusty spiral arm of IC 2163 ( Mpc). Pre-discovery ground-based imaging revealed an associated, shorter-duration transient in the optical and near-IR (NIR). NIR spectroscopy showed a broad ( km s), double-peaked emission line of He I at m, indicating an explosive origin. The NIR spectrum of SPIRITS 15c is similar to that of the Type IIb SN 2011dh at a phase of days. Assuming mag of extinction in SPIRITS 15c provides a good match between their optical…
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