A study in scarlet -- I. Photometric properties of a sample of Intermediate Luminosity Red Transients
G. Valerin, A. Pastorello, A. Reguitti, S. Benetti, Y.-Z. Cai, T.-W., Chen, D. Eappachen, N. Elias-Rosa, M. Fraser, A. Gangopadhyay, E. Y. Hsiao,, D. A. Howell, C. Inserra, L. Izzo, J. Jencson, E. Kankare, R. Kotak, P. A., Mazzali, K. Misra, G. Pignata, S. J. Prentice

TL;DR
This study analyzes the photometric properties of Intermediate Luminosity Red Transients, revealing dust formation, late-time luminosity decline, and evidence supporting their terminal explosion nature through multi-wavelength observations and modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength photometric analysis of ILRTs, including dust formation evidence and modeling of their explosion mechanisms.
Findings
Detection of infrared flux excess indicating dust formation.
Late-time luminosity decline suggests additional powering mechanisms.
Evidence supporting terminal explosion scenario for ILRTs.
Abstract
We investigate the photometric characteristics of a sample of Intermediate Luminosity Red Transients (ILRTs), a class of elusive objects with peak luminosity between that of classical novae and standard supernovae. We present the multi-wavelength photometric follow-up of four ILRTs, namely NGC 300 2008OT-1, AT 2019abn, AT 2019ahd and AT 2019udc. Through the analysis and modelling of their spectral energy distribution and bolometric light curves we infer the physical parameters associated with these transients. All four objects display a single peaked light curve which ends in a linear decline in magnitudes at late phases. A flux excess with respect to a single black body emission is detected in the infrared domain for three objects in our sample, a few months after maximum. This feature, commonly found in ILRTs, is interpreted as a sign of dust formation. Mid infrared monitoring of NGC…
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Taxonomy
TopicsColor Science and Applications · Radiative Heat Transfer Studies · Calibration and Measurement Techniques
