arXiv:1306.1549 [astro-ph.SR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Supernova spectra below strong circum-stellar interaction
G. Leloudas, E. Y. Hsiao, J. Johansson, K. Maeda, T. J. Moriya, J. Nordin, T. Petrushevska, J. M. Silverman, J. Sollerman, M. D. Stritzinger, F. Taddia, D. Xu
Published 2013-06-06, updated 2015-04-08Version 2
We construct spectra of supernovae interacting strongly with a circumstellar medium (CSM) by adding SN templates, a black-body continuum and an emission-line spectrum. In a Monte Carlo simulation we generate more than 800 spectra, distribute them to 10 different classifiers and study how the different simulation parameters affect the appearance of the spectra. SNe IIn showing some structure over the continuum were characterized as SNe IInS. We demonstrate that the flux ratio of the underlying SN to the continuum fv is the most important parameter determining the spectral classification. Thermonuclear SNe get progressively classified as Ia-CSM, IInS and IIn as fv decreases. The transition between Ia-CSM and IInS occurs at fv~0.2-0.3. It shown that SNe Ia-CSM are found at the magnitude range -19.5> M >-21.6, in good agreement with observations, and that the faintest SN IIn that can hide a SN Ia has M = -20.1. The sample of SNe Ia-CSM shows an association with 91T-like SNe Ia. Our experiment does not support that this association is due to a luminosity bias (91T-like being brighter than normal Ia). We therefore conclude that this association has real physical origins and we propose that 91T-like explosions result from single degenerate progenitors. Despite the similarities between SNe Ibc and SNe Ia, the number of misclassifications between these types was small and mostly at low S/N. Combined with the luminosity function needed to reproduce the observed SN Ia-CSM luminosities, it is unlikely that SNe Ibc constitute an important contaminant within this sample. We show how Type II spectra transition to IIn and how the Ha profiles vary with fv. SNe IIn fainter than M = -17.2 are unable to mask SNe IIP brighter than M = -15. A simulation including radiative transfer shows that our simplified model is a good first order approximation. The spectra obtained are in good agreement with real data.