SN 2018is: a low-luminosity Type IIP supernova with narrow hydrogen emission lines at early phases
R. Dastidar, K. Misra, S. Valenti, D. J. Sand, A. Pastorello, A., Reguitti, G. Pignata, S. Benetti, S. Bose, A. Gangopadhyay, M. Singh, L., Tomasella, J. E. Andrews, I. Arcavi, C. Ashall, C. Bilinski, K. A. Bostroem,, D. A. H. Buckley, G. Cannizzaro, L. Chomiuk, E. Congiu

TL;DR
SN 2018is is a low-luminosity Type IIP supernova characterized by narrow hydrogen emission lines, a short recombination phase, and a low explosion energy, expanding our understanding of supernova diversity.
Contribution
This study provides detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of SN 2018is, revealing its unique properties and constraining its progenitor and explosion parameters.
Findings
Low luminosity with $V$-band magnitude of -15.1 mag
Narrow hydrogen emission lines at early phases
Progenitor mass estimated at ~9 M$_\odot$
Abstract
We present a comprehensive photometric and spectroscopic study of the Type IIP SN 2018is. The -band luminosity and the expansion velocity at 50 days post-explosion are 15.10.2 mag (corrected for A=1.34 mag) and 1400 km s, classifying it as a low-luminosity SN II. The recombination phase in the -band is shorter, lasting around 110 days, and exhibits a steeper decline (1.0 mag per 100 days) compared to most other low-luminosity SNe II. Additionally, the optical and near-infrared spectra display hydrogen emission lines that are strikingly narrow, even for this class. The Fe II and Sc II line velocities are at the lower end of the typical range for low-luminosity SNe II. Semi-analytical modelling of the bolometric light curve suggests an ejecta mass of 8 M, corresponding to a pre-supernova mass of 9.5 M, and an explosion energy of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
