After the Fall: Late-Time Spectroscopy of Type IIP Supernovae
Jeffrey M. Silverman, Stephanie Pickett, J. Craig Wheeler, Alexei V., Filippenko, Jozsef Vinko, G. H. Marion, S. Bradley Cenko, Ryan Chornock,, Kelsey I. Clubb, Ryan J. Foley, Melissa L. Graham, Patrick L. Kelly, Thomas, Matheson, Joseph C. Shields

TL;DR
This study analyzes late-time spectra of 38 Type IIP supernovae, revealing correlations between spectral features and photometric decline rates, and providing insights into progenitor properties and explosion asymmetries.
Contribution
It presents the largest dataset of late-time spectra for SNe IIP, linking spectral features with photometric and progenitor characteristics, and compares observations with theoretical models.
Findings
Spectral luminosities correlate with late-time V-band decline rates.
Larger progenitors have more extended, well-mixed oxygen layers.
Evidence suggests some supernovae eject bipolar Ni-56.
Abstract
Herein we analyse late-time (post-plateau; 103 < t < 1229 d) optical spectra of low-redshift (z < 0.016), hydrogen-rich Type IIP supernovae (SNe IIP). Our newly constructed sample contains 91 nebular spectra of 38 SNe IIP, which is the largest dataset of its kind ever analysed in one study, and many of the objects have complementary photometric data. We determined the peak and total luminosity, velocity of the peak, HWHM intensity, and profile shape for many emission lines. Temporal evolution of these values and various flux ratios are studied. We also investigate the correlations between these measurements and photometric observables, such as the peak and plateau absolute magnitudes and the late-time light curve decline rates in various optical bands. The strongest and most robust result we find is that the luminosities of all spectral features (except those of helium) tend to be…
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.
