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Post Info TOPIC: Supernova 2006ov


L

Posts: 131433
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RE: Supernova 2006my
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Title: An Upper Mass Limit on a Red Supergiant Progenitor for the Type II-Plateau Supernova SN 2006my
Authors: Douglas C. Leonard, Avishay Gal-Yam, Derek B. Fox, P. B. Cameron, Erik M. Johansson, Adam L. Kraus, David Le Mignant, Marcos A. van Dam

We analyse two pre-supernova (SN) and three post-SN high resolution images of the site of the Type II-Plateau supernova SN 2006my in an effort to either detect the progenitor star or to constrain its properties. Following image registration, we find that an isolated stellar object is not detected at the location of SN 2006my in either of the two pre-SN images. In the first, an I-band image obtained with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 on board the Hubble Space Telescope, the offset between the SN 2006my location and a detected source ("Source 1") is too large: > 0.08'', which corresponds to a confidence level of non-association of 96% from our most liberal estimates of the transformation and measurement uncertainties. In the second, a similarly obtained V-band image, a source is detected ("Source 2") that has overlap with the SN 2006my location, but is definitively an extended object. Through artificial star tests carried out on the precise location of SN 2006my in the images, we derive a 3-sigma upper bound on the luminosity of a red supergiant that could have remained undetected in our pre-SN images of Log L/L_Sun = 5.10, which translates to an upper bound on such a star's initial mass of 15 M_Sun from the STARS stellar evolutionary models. Although considered unlikely, we can not rule out the possibility that part of the light comprising Source 1, which exhibits a slight extension relative to other point sources in the image, or part of the light contributing to the extended Source 2, may be due to the progenitor of SN 2006my. Only additional, high-resolution observations of the site taken after SN 2006my has faded beyond detection can confirm or reject these possibilities.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: Supernova 2006ov
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Title: On the Progenitors of Two Type II-P Supernovae in the Virgo Cluster
Authors: Weidong Li (1), Xiaofeng Wang (1,2), Schuyler D. Van Dyk (3), Jean-Charles Cuillandre (4), Ryan J. Foley (1), Alexei V. Filippenko (1) (1. UC Berkeley, 2. THCA, China, 3. Spitzer Science Centre, Caltech, 4. CFHT corporation)

Direct identification of the progenitors of supernovae (SNe) is rare because of the required spatial resolution and depth of the archival data prior to the SN explosions. Here we report the identification of the progenitors of two nearby SNe in the Virgo cluster: SN 2006my in NGC 4651 and SN 2006ov in M61. We obtained high-quality ground-based images of SN 2006my with the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, and are able to locate the site of the SN on pre-SN Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) images to a high precision (1 sigma uncertainty of ± 0."05). We pinpoint the site of SN 2006ov to within 0."02 from HST Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) images of the SN. We detected a red supergiant progenitor for each SN within the error circles, with an inferred zero-age main-sequence mass of 7--15 solar masses and 12--20 solar masses for the progenitor of SNe 2006my and 2006ov, respectively. The mass estimates for the progenitors of both SNe confirm an early trend that the most common Type II-plateau SNe originate from low-mass supergiants (8--20 solar masses).

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2supernovas

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L

Posts: 131433
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A Mag 14.8 type II Supernova, 2006ov, was discovered on the 24th November, 2006, by Koichi Itagaki in the spiral galaxy M61 (NGC4303) in the constellation Virgo.
It is located 5".5 east and 51" north of the centre of the galaxy.

Position(2000): at R.A. = 12h21m55s.30, Dec. = +04°29'16".7
Z = 0.005224

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