Far-Ultraviolet to Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of A Nearby Hydrogen Poor Superluminous Supernova Gaia16apd
Lin Yan (Caltech/IPAC), R. Quimby (SDSU), A. Gal-Yam (Weizmann), P., Brown (Texas AandM), N. Blagorodnova (Caltech), E.O.Ofek (Weizmann), R., Lunnan (Caltech), J. Cooke (Swinburne), S.B. Cenko (GSFC), J. Jencson, (Caltech), M.Kasliwal (Caltech)

TL;DR
This study presents the first maximum-light UV to near-infrared spectra of the nearby hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova Gaia16apd, revealing its extreme UV luminosity and providing insights into its progenitor metallicity and explosion mechanism.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive UV to NIR spectral data of Gaia16apd at maximum light, offering new evidence on progenitor metallicity and challenging PISN models for such supernovae.
Findings
Gaia16apd is extremely UV luminous, emitting 50% of its luminosity in the 1000-2500A range.
The supernova's low metal line blanketing suggests a low progenitor metallicity.
The observations disfavor PISN models with large helium core masses.
Abstract
We report the first maximum-light far-Ultraviolet to near-infrared spectra (1000A - 1.62um, rest) of a H-poor superluminous supernova, Gaia16apd. At z=0.1018, it is one of the closest and the UV brightest such events, with 17.4 (AB) magnitude in Swift UV band (1928A) at -11days pre-maximum. Assuming an exponential form, we derived the rise time of 33days and the peak bolometric luminosity of 3x10^{44}ergs^-1. At maximum light, the estimated photospheric temperature and velocity are 17,000K and 14,000kms^-1 respectively. The inferred radiative and kinetic energy are roughly 1x10^{51} and 2x10^{52}erg. Gaia16apd is extremely UV luminous, emitting 50% of its total luminosity at 1000 - 2500A. Compared to the UV spectra (normalized at 3100A) of well studied SN1992A (Ia), SN2011fe(Ia), SN1999em (IIP) and SN1993J (IIb), it has orders of magnitude more far-UV emission. This excess is…
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