A rapidly declining transient discovered with Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam
Nozomu Tominaga, Tomoki Morokuma, Masaomi Tanaka, Naoki Yasuda,, Hisanori Furusawa, Masayuki Tanaka, Ji-an Jiang, Alexey Tolstov, Sergei, Blinnikov, Mamoru Doi, Ikuru Iwata, Hanindyo Kuncarayakti, Takashi J. Moriya,, Tohru Nagao, Ken'ichi Nomoto, Junichi Noumaru

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a rapidly declining blue transient, SHOOT14di, using high-cadence Subaru HSC observations, and suggests it is best explained by a shock breakout from a low-energy red supergiant supernova.
Contribution
First high-cadence, multicolor optical transient survey with Subaru HSC, discovering a unique rapidly declining transient and analyzing its nature with theoretical models.
Findings
Discovered a unique rapidly declining transient SHOOT14di.
SHOOT14di's properties are best explained by a shock breakout from a low-energy red supergiant supernova.
Highlights importance of high-cadence surveys for studying high-redshift supernovae.
Abstract
We perform a high-cadence transient survey with Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC), which we call the Subaru HSC survey Optimized for Optical Transients (SHOOT). We conduct HSC imaging observations with time intervals of about one hour on two successive nights, and spectroscopic and photometric follow-up observations. A rapidly declining blue transient SHOOT14di at is found in observations on two successive nights with an image subtraction technique. The rate of brightness change is () in the observer (rest) frame and the rest-frame color between and is . The nature of the object is investigated by comparing its peak luminosity, decline rate, and color with those of transients and…
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