The Type II-plateau Supernova 2017eaw in NGC 6946 and Its Red Supergiant Progenitor

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Issue Date
2019-04-24Author
Van Dyk, Schuyler D.
Zheng, WeiKang
Maund, Justyn R.
Brink, Thomas G.
Srinivasan, Sundar
Andrews, Jennifer E.
Smith, Nathan
Leonard, Douglas C.
Morozova, Viktoriya
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Conner, Brody
Milisavljevic, Dan
de Jaeger, Thomas
Long, Knox S.
Isaacson, Howard
Crossfield, Ian
Kosiarek, Molly R.
Howard, Andrew W.
Fox, Ori D.
Kelly, Patrick L.
Piro, Anthony L.
Littlefair, Stuart P.
Dhillon, Vik S.
Wilson, Richard
Butterley, Timothy
Yunus, Sameen
Channa, Sanyum
Jeffers, Benjamin T.
Falcon, Edward
Ross, Timothy W.
Hestenes, Julia C.
Stegman, Samantha M.
Zhang, Keto
Kumar, Sahana
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
© 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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Show full item recordAbstract
We present extensive optical photometric and spectroscopic observations, from 4 to 482 days after explosion, of the Type II-plateau (II-P) supernova (SN) 2017eaw in NGC 6946. SN 2017eaw is a normal SN II-P intermediate in properties between, for example, SN 1999em and SN 2012aw and the more luminous SN 2004et, also in NGC 6946. We have determined that the extinction to SN 2017eaw is primarily due to the Galactic foreground and that the SN site metallicity is likely subsolar. We have also independently confirmed a tip-of-the-red-giant-branch (TRGB) distance to NGC 6946 of 7.73 ± 0.78 Mpc. The distances to the SN that we have also estimated via both the standardized candle method and expanding photosphere method corroborate the TRGB distance. We confirm the SN progenitor identity in pre-explosion archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and Spitzer Space Telescope images, via imaging of the SN through our HST Target of Opportunity program. Detailed modeling of the progenitor's spectral energy distribution indicates that the star was a dusty, luminous red supergiant consistent with an initial mass of ~15 M ⊙.
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Citation
Schuyler D. Van Dyk et al 2019 ApJ 875 136
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