Faintest of them all : ZTF 21aaoryiz/SN 2021fcg -- Discovery of an extremely low luminosity type Iax supernova
Viraj R. Karambelkar (1), Mansi M. Kasliwal (1), Kate Maguire (2),, Shreya G. Anand (1), Igor Andreoni (1), Kishalay De (1), Andrew Drake (1),, Dmitry A. Duev (1), Matthew J. Graham (1), Erik C. Kool (3), Russ R. Laher, (4), Mark R. Magee (2), Ashish A. Mahabal (1)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of the faintest known thermonuclear supernova, SN 2021fcg, a low-luminosity Type Iax supernova, providing new insights into its properties and possible progenitor models.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of an extremely low-luminosity Type Iax supernova and discusses its spectral and luminosity characteristics, challenging existing progenitor theories.
Findings
SN 2021fcg is the least luminous thermonuclear supernova discovered.
Spectra show very low velocity [Ca II] emission similar to other low-luminosity SNe Iax.
The supernova's low luminosity and nickel mass suggest a merger progenitor rather than a white dwarf deflagration.
Abstract
We present the discovery of ZTF 21aaoryiz/SN 2021fcg -- an extremely low-luminosity Type Iax supernova. SN 2021fcg was discovered by the Zwicky Transient Facility in the star-forming galaxy IC0512 at a distance of 27 Mpc. It reached a peak absolute magnitude of mag, making it the least luminous thermonuclear supernova discovered to date. The E(B-V) contribution from the underlying host galaxy is unconstrained. However, even if it were as large as 0.5 mag, the peak absolute magnitude would be mag -- still consistent with being the lowest luminosity SN. Optical spectra of SN 2021fcg taken at 37 and 65 days post maximum show strong [Ca II], Ca II and Na I D emission and several weak [Fe II] emission lines. The [Ca II] emission in the two spectra has extremely low velocities of and km s respectively.…
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