First systematic high-precision survey of bright supernovae I. Methodology for identifying early bumps
E. Paraskeva, A. Z. Bonanos, A. Liakos, Z. T. Spetsieri, Justyn R., Maund

TL;DR
This study conducted high-cadence optical monitoring of early supernova light curves to detect intraday variability and develop methodology for identifying early bumps, enhancing understanding of supernova physics and progenitors.
Contribution
It presents a systematic approach using high-cadence photometry and advanced data processing techniques to analyze early supernova light curves and search for early bumps.
Findings
No significant early bumps detected above 0.05 mag
Achieved photometric precision of 0.01-0.04 mag
Provided first-time measurements of maximum light for SN 2018hhn
Abstract
Rapid variability before and near the maximum brightness of supernovae has the potential to provide a better understanding of nearly every aspect of supernovae, from the physics of the explosion up to their progenitors and the circumstellar environment. Thanks to modern time-domain optical surveys, which are discovering supernovae in the early stage of their evolution, we have the unique opportunity to capture their intraday behavior before maximum. We present high-cadence photometric monitoring (on the order of seconds-minutes) of the optical light curves of three Type Ia and two Type II SNe over several nights before and near maximum light, using the fast imagers available on the 2.3~m Aristarchos telescope at Helmos Observatory and the 1.2~m telescope at Kryoneri Observatory in Greece. We applied differential aperture photometry techniques using optimal apertures and we present…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
