Observational and Physical Classification of Supernovae
Avishay Gal-Yam

TL;DR
This paper reviews the evolving classification scheme of supernovae, linking observational categories to physical explosion mechanisms, and discusses new luminous supernova types and alternative classification proposals suitable for large future datasets.
Contribution
It establishes a classification scheme based on direct observational evidence connecting supernova groups with specific progenitor stars and introduces a quantitative, continuum-based system inspired by stellar classification.
Findings
Connection of SN classes with specific progenitors.
Identification of super-luminous SNe (SLSNe).
Proposal of a new, continuum-based classification system.
Abstract
This chapter describes the current classification scheme of supernovae (SNe). This scheme has evolved over many decades and now includes numerous SN Types and sub-types. Many of these are universally recognized, while there are controversies regarding the definitions, membership and even the names of some sub-classes; we will try to review here the commonly-used nomenclature, noting the main variants when possible. SN Types are defined according to observational properties; mostly visible-light spectra near maximum light, as well as according to their photometric properties. However, a long-term goal of SN classification is to associate observationally-defined classes with specific physical explosive phenomena. We show here that this aspiration is now finally coming to fruition, and we establish the SN classification scheme upon direct observational evidence connecting SN groups with…
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