SPIRITS 16tn in NGC 3556: A heavily obscured and low-luminosity supernova at 8.8 Mpc
Jacob E. Jencson (1), Mansi M. Kasliwal (1), Scott M. Adams (1),, Howard E. Bond (2, 3), Ryan M. Lau (1, 4), Joel Johansson (5), Assaf, Horesh (6), Kunal P. Mooley (7), Robert Fender (7), Kishalay De (1), D\'onal, O'Sullivan (1), Frank J. Masci (8), Ann Marie Cody (9)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a heavily obscured, low-luminosity supernova in NGC 3556 using infrared observations, highlighting the importance of IR surveys in detecting optically hidden nearby supernovae.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a highly obscured, low-luminosity supernova discovered via infrared, demonstrating the effectiveness of IR surveys in uncovering hidden nearby supernovae.
Findings
The supernova is among the most highly obscured IR-discovered SNe to date.
It is likely a low-luminosity Type II supernova, similar to SN 2005cs.
Deep radio observations exclude many core-collapse supernova types.
Abstract
We present the discovery by the SPitzer InfraRed Intensive Transients Survey (SPIRITS) of a likely supernova (SN) in NGC 3556 at only 8.8 Mpc, which, despite its proximity, was not detected by optical searches. A luminous infrared (IR) transient at mag (Vega), SPIRITS 16tn is coincident with a dust lane in the inclined, star-forming disk of the host. Using IR, optical, and radio observations, we attempt to determine the nature of this event. We estimate 8 - 9 mag of extinction, placing it among the three most highly obscured IR-discovered SNe to date. The [4.5] light curve declined at a rate of 0.013 mag day, and the color grew redder from 0.7 to 1.0 mag by 184.7 days post discovery. Optical/IR spectroscopy shows a red continuum, but no clearly discernible features, preventing a definitive spectroscopic classification.…
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