The Carnegie Supernova Project II Observations of the luminous red nova AT 2014ej
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
Supernovae: individual: AT2014ej Supernovae: general
Date
2020-07Referencia bibliográfica
Stritzinger, M. D., Taddia, F., Fraser, M., Tauris, T. M., Contreras, C., Drybye, S., ... & Phillips, M. M. (2020). The Carnegie Supernova Project II-Observations of the luminous red nova AT 2014ej. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 639, A104. [https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202038019]
Patrocinador
USA's NSF AST-0306969 AST-0607438 AST-1008343 AST-1613426 AST-1613455 AST-1613472; Danish Agency for Science and Technology and Innovation; Independent Research Fund Denmark (IRFD) 8021-00170B; VILLUM FONDEN 13261; Science Foundation Ireland; European Union (EU) 754513; Aarhus University Research Foundation; European Union (EU) 839090; European Union (EU) PGC2018095317-B-C21; Ministry of Economy, Development, and Tourism's Millennium Science Initiative IC120009; National Science Foundation (NSF) AST-1613455; Texas A&M University Mitchell/Heep/Munnerlyn Chair in Observational Astronomy; Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT) CONICYT FONDECYT 1191038; ESO Telescopes at the La Silla Paranal Observatory 191.D-0935 096.B-0230Résumé
We present optical and near-infrared broadband photometry and optical spectra of AT 2014ej from the Carnegie Supernova ProjectII. These observations are complemented with data from the CHilean Automatic Supernova sEarch, the Public ESO Spectroscopic
Survey of Transient Objects, and from the Backyard Observatory Supernova Search. Observational signatures of AT 2014ej reveal that
it is similar to other members of the gap-transient subclass known as luminous red novae (LRNe), including the ubiquitous doublehump light curve and spectral properties similar to that of LRN SN 2017jfs. A medium-dispersion visual-wavelength spectrum of
AT 2014ej taken with the Magellan Clay telescope exhibits a P Cygni Hα feature characterized by a blue velocity at zero intensity
of ≈110 km s−1
and a P Cygni minimum velocity of ≈70 km s−1
. We attribute this to emission from a circumstellar wind. Inspection
of pre-outbust Hubble Space Telescope images yields no conclusive progenitor detection. In comparison with a sample of LRNe from
the literature, AT 2014ej lies at the brighter end of the luminosity distribution. Comparison of the ultra-violet, optical, infrared light
curves of well-observed LRNe to common-envelope evolution models from the literature indicates that the models underpredict the
luminosity of the comparison sample at all phases and also produce inconsistent timescales of the secondary peak. Future efforts to
model LRNe should expand upon the current parameter space we explore here and therefore may consider more massive systems and
a wider range of dynamical timescales.