SN 2017ati: A luminous type IIb explosion from a massive progenitor
Z.-H. Peng, S. Benetti, Y.-Z. Cai, A. Pastorello, J.-W. Zhao, A. Reguitti, Z.-Y. Wang, E. Cappellaro, N. Elias-Rosa, Q.-L. Fang, M. Fraser, T. Kangas, E. Kankare, Z. Kostrzewa-Rutkowska, P. Lundqvist, S. Mattila, T. M. Reynolds, M. D. Stritzinger, A. Somero, L. Tomasella

TL;DR
SN 2017ati, a luminous Type IIb supernova, exhibits an unusually bright late-time luminosity best explained by a combination of radioactive decay and magnetar energy input, indicating a massive progenitor.
Contribution
This study provides detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of SN 2017ati, highlighting the need for magnetar energy input to explain its luminosity and estimating a massive progenitor star.
Findings
SN 2017ati reached a broad, luminous peak with M_r = -18.48 mag.
Standard nickel decay models cannot fully explain the late-time brightness.
Inclusion of magnetar energy improves light curve modeling and suggests a massive progenitor.
Abstract
We present optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the Type~IIb supernova (SN)~2017ati. It reached the maximum light at about 27~d after the explosion and the light curve shows a broad, luminous peak with an absolute -band magnitude of ~mag. At about 50~d after maximum light, SN~2017ati exhibits a decline rate close to that expected from the Co Fe radioactive decay, at 0.98 mag per 100 days, as usually observed in SNe IIb. However, it remains systematically brighter at late times by about 1--2~mag, exceeding the usual upper luminosity range of this class. As a result, modelling the light curve of SN~2017ati with a standard Ni decay scenario requires a large nickel mass of up to and still fails to reproduce the early-time light curve adequately. In contrast, incorporating additional energy…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
