Photometric, polarimetric, and spectroscopic studies of the luminous, slow-decaying Type Ib SN 2012au
S. B. Pandey, Amit Kumar, Brajesh Kumar, G. C. Anupama, S. Srivastav,, D. K. Sahu, J. Vinko, A. Aryan, A. Pastorello, S. Benetti, L. Tomasella,, Avinash Singh, A. S. Moskvitin, V. V. Sokolov, R. Gupta, K. Misra, P. Ochner, and S. Valenti

TL;DR
This study presents comprehensive photometric, spectroscopic, and polarimetric analyses of SN 2012au, a luminous, slow-decaying Type Ib supernova, revealing its progenitor characteristics, ejecta properties, and potential magnetar-powered explosion mechanism.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational data and modeling that suggest SN 2012au is powered by a magnetar and originates from a Wolf-Rayet star, offering new insights into luminous Type Ib supernovae.
Findings
SN 2012au is one of the most luminous slow-decaying Type Ib SNe.
Ejecta mass is estimated between 4.7 and 8.3 solar masses.
Spectral analysis indicates a Wolf-Rayet progenitor with specific mass estimates.
Abstract
Optical, near-infrared (NIR) photometric and spectroscopic studies, along with the optical imaging polarimetric results for SN 2012au, are presented in this article to constrain the nature of the progenitor and other properties. Well-calibrated multiband optical photometric data (from 0.2 to +413 d since -band maximum) were used to compute the bolometric light curve and to perform semi-analytical light-curve modelling using the code. A spin-down millisecond magnetar-powered model explains the observed photometric evolution of SN 2012au reasonably. Early-time imaging polarimetric follow-up observations (2 to +31 d) and comparison with other similar cases indicate signatures of asphericity in the ejecta. Good spectral coverage of SN 2012au (from 5 to +391 d) allows us to trace the evolution of layers of SN ejecta in detail. SN 2012au exhibits higher line…
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