Between Plateaus and Slopes: A Data-Driven Exploration of Spectral Diversity Across Type IIP/L Supernovae
G\'eza Cs\"ornyei, Claudia P. Guti\'errez

TL;DR
This study uses a data-driven spectral analysis to investigate the continuum between Type IIP and IIL supernovae, revealing spectral correlations and a gradual transition rather than distinct categories.
Contribution
Introduces a novel spectral standardization and analysis method demonstrating the spectral continuum between SNe IIP and IIL, challenging traditional discrete classifications.
Findings
Spectral diversity diminishes over time.
Steeper decline correlates with weaker spectral features.
Some clustering suggests partial separation but overall continuum.
Abstract
Type II supernovae (SNe II) have been traditionally separated into several subgroups based on their photometric and spectroscopic properties, but whether these represent distinct progenitors or a continuous distribution remains debated. Over the past decade, growing observational evidence has suggested a possible continuity between slow- (IIP) and fast-declining (IIL) SNe. We investigate the continuity of the SNe IIP/L subclasses through a data-driven statistical analysis of spectral time series, aiming to determine whether significant correlations exist between overall spectral shapes and light-curve decline rates. We introduce a novel standardization method for SN II spectra. After empirically flattening the spectra via continuum normalization, we interpolate the resulting "feature spectra" onto a fixed grid of epochs using Gaussian Process regression. The interpolated spectra are…
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