ASASSN-15nx: A luminous Type II supernova with a "perfect" linear decline
Subhash Bose (KIAA-PKU), Subo Dong (KIAA-PKU), C. S. Kochanek, Andrea, Pastorello, Boaz Katz, David Bersier, Jennifer E. Andrews, J. L. Prieto, K., Z. Stanek, B. J. Shappee, Nathan Smith, Juna Kollmeier, Stefano Benetti, E., Cappellaro, Ping Chen, N. Elias-Rosa, Peter Milne

TL;DR
ASASSN-15nx is a luminous Type II supernova with an unusually long, linear decline in brightness, likely powered by Ni56 decay or unique CSM interactions, challenging typical supernova models.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery of a supernova with a unique linear decline in its light curve, differing from typical Type II supernovae, and explores possible powering mechanisms.
Findings
Long, linear post-peak light curve without a break.
Spectroscopic peculiarities including weak, triangular H-alpha emission.
High Ni56 mass suggesting radioactive decay as a power source.
Abstract
We report a luminous Type II supernova, ASASSN-15nx, with a peak luminosity of M_V=-20 mag, that is between typical core-collapse supernovae and super-luminous supernovae. The post-peak optical light curves show a long, linear decline with a steep slope of 2.5 mag/100 days (i.e., an exponential decline in flux), through the end of observations at phase ~260 days. In contrast, the light curves of hydrogen rich supernovae (SNe II-P/L) always show breaks in their light curves at phase ~100 days, before settling onto Co56 radioactive decay tails with a decline rate of about 1 mag/100 days. The spectra of ASASSN-15nx do not exhibit the narrow emission-line features characteristic of Type IIn SNe, which can have a wide variety of light-curve shapes usually attributed to strong interactions with a dense circumstellar medium (CSM). ASASSN-15nx has a number of spectroscopic peculiarities,…
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