Intermediate-luminosity red transients: Spectrophotometric properties and connection to electron-capture supernova explosions
Y.-Z. Cai, A. Pastorello, M. Fraser, M. T. Botticella, N. Elias-Rosa,, L.-Z. Wang, R. Kotak, S. Benetti, E. Cappellaro, M. Turatto, A. Reguitti, S., Mattila, S. J. Smartt, C. Ashall, S. Benitez, T.-W. Chen, A. Harutyunyan, E., Kankare, P. Lundqvist, P. A. Mazzali

TL;DR
This study characterizes five intermediate-luminosity red transients, revealing their spectrophotometric properties, light curve behaviors, and potential origin as electron-capture supernovae from super-AGB stars.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectrophotometric analysis of ILRTs and links their properties to electron-capture supernova explosions of super-AGB stars.
Findings
ILRTs have rise times less than 15 days and peak magnitudes between -11.5 and -14.5 mag.
Their light curves show monotonic decline or plateau, with late-time flattening consistent with radioactive decay.
Spectra exhibit prominent H emission lines and [Ca II] doublet, with IR excess indicating dusty progenitors.
Abstract
We present the spectroscopic and photometric study of five intermediate-luminosity red transients (ILRTs), namely AT 2010dn, AT 2012jc, AT 2013la, AT 2013lb, and AT 2018aes. They share common observational properties and belong to a family of objects similar to the prototypical ILRT SN~2008S. These events have a rise time that is less than 15 days and absolute peak magnitudes of between and mag. Their pseudo-bolometric light curves peak in the range - and their total radiated energies are on the order of (0.3 - 3) ~10~erg. After maximum brightness, the light curves show a monotonic decline or a plateau, resembling those of faint supernovae IIL or IIP, respectively. At late phases, the light curves flatten, roughly following the slope of the Co decay. If the late-time power source is indeed radioactive…
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