Optical and near-infrared photometry of 94 type II supernovae from the Carnegie Supernova Project
J.P. Anderson, C. Contreras, M.D. Stritzinger, M. Hamuy, M.M., Phillips, N.B. Suntzeff, N. Morrell, S. Gonzalez-Gaitan, C.P. Gutierrez, C.R., Burns, E.Y. Hsiao, J. Anais, C. Ashall, C. Baltay, E. Baron, M. Bersten, L., Busta, S. Castellon, T. de Jaeger, D. DePoy, A.V. Filippenko

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive high-quality optical and near-infrared photometric dataset of 94 low-redshift Type II supernovae from the Carnegie Supernova Project, enabling detailed analysis of their properties and subtypes.
Contribution
The study provides the largest well-calibrated low-redshift SNeII photometric dataset, introduces a new fast-declining SNeII subclass, and offers detailed analysis of individual supernovae and their light curve characteristics.
Findings
The dataset includes 9817 optical and 1872 NIR data points.
Fast-declining SNeII are more luminous and have shorter plateau phases.
SN2009A exhibits a unique light curve with superimposed spectral features.
Abstract
Type II supernovae (SNeII) mark the endpoint in the lives of hydrogen-rich massive stars. Their large explosion energies and luminosities allow us to measure distances, metallicities, and star formation rates into the distant Universe. To fully exploit their use in answering different astrophysical problems, high-quality low-redshift data sets are required. Such samples are vital to understand the physics of SNeII, but also to serve as calibrators for distinct - and often lower-quality - samples. We present uBgVri optical and YJH near-infrared (NIR) photometry for 94 low-redshift SNeII observed by the Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP). A total of 9817 optical and 1872 NIR photometric data points are released, leading to a sample of high-quality SNII light curves during the first ~150 days post explosion on a well-calibrated photometric system. The sample is presented and its properties…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
