Peremennye Zvezdy (Variable Stars) 40, No. 4, 2020 Received 7 September; accepted 15 September. DOI 10.24411/2221-0474-2020-10005
|
Article in PDF |
CCD BVRI and unfiltered photometry is presented for the type IIn Supernova 2016ehw. The object reached maximum with Rmax = 15.4 mag and absolute magnitude MR = –18.1 mag on JD 2457547. The brightness in the R band declined by 3.1 mag during 170 days of observations. The rate of decline increased at the phase about 80 days past maximum. Comparison of the light and color curves of SN 2016ehw to those of well-studied type IIn SNe shows that this SN is quite typical for its class considering photometric evolution and maximum luminosity. |
A large fraction of massive stars explode at the end of their lives due to the gravitational collapse of their cores; such events are recognized as core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe). Type II SNe are hydrogen-rich CCSNe; a fraction of these objects exhibit signatures of ejecta interaction with circumstellar matter (CSM), such events are classified as SNe IIn (see, for instance, Schlegel, 1990). SNe IIn are characterized by relatively high maximum luminosity due to the energy input from interaction between ejecta and CSM, they exhibit diversity of photometric evolution because of different structure of CSM and parameters of the ejecta.
![]() |
Fig. 1. SN 2016ehw and local standard stars. The image was obtained with the 60-cm telescope in the R band. |
In this paper, we present the results of our photometric observations of a bright type IIn Supernova, SN 2016ehw.
The MASTER-Amur auto-detection system (Lipunov et al., 2010)
discovered a transient source at
on 2016-06-04 16:14:44.427 UT.
The unfiltered magnitude of the object was 15
9. The reference
images without the source were obtained on 2016-05-25 20:01:44 UT
with unfiltered
at the MASTER-Kislovodsk telescope.
The object was located in
from the center of a barred
spiral galaxy PGC024209 (MCG+12-8-47) (Vladimirov et al., 2016).
The SN was independently discovered by Gaia on 2016-07-20.31 and
designated Gaia16avr, the photometric observations in the Gaia-
band continued till
2017-02-181.
The Open Supernova Catalogue2reported classification of the SN as type IIn and the redshift of the
host galaxy .
We carried out photometric observations of SN 2016ehw in the
bands from 2016-08-29 to 2016-11-28 with the 60-cm
reflector of the Crimean Observatory of Sternberg Astronomical
Institute (SAI). The observations with MASTER telescopes were
carried out at Kislovodsk, Tunka, and Amur sites (Lipunov et al.,
2010). Unfiltered images (designated further as
-band ones)
were obtained from 2016-06-04 to 2016-10-13, observations with
filters were carried out between 2016-06-06 and 2016-07-04.
The standard image reductions and photometry were made using
IRAF3. Photometric
measurements of the SN were made relative to local standard stars
using PSF fitting with the IRAF DAOPHOT package. The unfiltered
frames were reduced using the -band magnitudes of local
standards. The surface brightness of host galaxy at the location
of the SN was low and did not affect the measurements, so the
subtraction of galaxy background was not necessary. The image of
SN 2016ehw with local standards is shown in Fig. 1. The magnitudes
of the stars were calibrated on 3 nights in November 2016, when
the Landolt (1992) standards were observed. They are presented in
Table 1.
The results of our photometry of SN 2016ehw are reported in Tables 2, 3, and 4.
The light curves are shown in Fig. 2. The upper limit on
2016-05-25.8 (JD 2457534.3) and the first observations demonstrate
clearly that the SN was discovered on the rising part of its light
curve. The maximum light was reached on JD 2457547
(2016-06-07) with
. The unfiltered magnitudes are
in a good agreement with the
-band observations later than
JD 2457570, but for earlier time, the
magnitudes may be
brighter due to the blue color of the SN. On JD 2457546.39, the
-band magnitude was by
mag fainter than the
unfiltered one, so we may expect the
-band maximum magnitude to
be about
mag.
Star | ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
1 | 12.73 | 0.02 | 12.25 | 0.02 | 11.93 | 0.01 | 11.67 | 0.02 |
2 | 15.65 | 0.05 | 14.95 | 0.03 | 14.50 | 0.03 | 14.11 | 0.01 |
3 | 16.21 | 0.02 | 15.53 | 0.03 | 15.11 | 0.03 | 14.71 | 0.02 |
4 | 16.63 | 0.02 | 15.80 | 0.02 | 15.30 | 0.02 | 14.89 | 0.03 |
5 | 16.39 | 0.03 | 15.45 | 0.02 | 14.91 | 0.02 | 14.39 | 0.02 |
6 | 17.15 | 0.08 | 16.12 | 0.03 | 15.54 | 0.03 | 15.04 | 0.05 |
7 | 16.45 | 0.07 | 15.60 | 0.02 | 15.02 | 0.02 | 14.52 | 0.02 |
JD 2457000+ | ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
631.57 | 18.27 | 0.11 | 17.08 | 0.03 | 16.39 | 0.03 | 16.08 | 0.03 |
632.58 | 18.15 | 0.10 | 17.10 | 0.05 | 16.41 | 0.05 | 16.09 | 0.03 |
634.49 | 18.29 | 0.06 | 17.15 | 0.03 | 16.46 | 0.03 | 16.12 | 0.03 |
635.56 | 18.35 | 0.06 | 17.23 | 0.03 | 16.48 | 0.03 | 16.18 | 0.03 |
636.54 | 18.35 | 0.05 | 17.29 | 0.03 | 16.53 | 0.03 | 16.22 | 0.03 |
638.55 | 18.50 | 0.06 | 17.30 | 0.03 | 16.51 | 0.04 | 16.23 | 0.04 |
640.56 | 18.56 | 0.06 | 17.36 | 0.03 | 16.57 | 0.03 | 16.28 | 0.03 |
642.57 | 18.62 | 0.06 | 17.41 | 0.03 | 16.65 | 0.03 | 16.35 | 0.03 |
645.55 | 18.75 | 0.06 | 17.54 | 0.03 | 16.73 | 0.03 | 16.41 | 0.03 |
646.56 | 18.80 | 0.06 | 17.62 | 0.03 | 16.79 | 0.03 | 16.45 | 0.03 |
704.50 | 19.42 | 0.05 | 18.27 | 0.04 | ||||
711.47 | 19.74 | 0.07 | 18.47 | 0.04 | 18.15 | 0.07 | ||
713.49 | 19.77 | 0.09 | 18.60 | 0.04 | 18.27 | 0.04 | ||
714.38 | 19.54 | 0.07 | 18.56 | 0.04 | 18.36 | 0.06 | ||
715.58 | 18.56 | 0.06 | 18.30 | 0.08 |
JD 2457000+ | ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
546.39 | 15.68 | 0.06 | 15.55 | 0.04 | 15.49 | 0.04 | 15.64 | 0.08 |
555.39 | 15.46 | 0.06 | ||||||
558.39 | 15.57 | 0.07 | 15.57 | 0.09 | ||||
561.39 | 15.54 | 0.06 | 15.40 | 0.07 | ||||
570.40 | 16.51 | 0.07 | 15.97 | 0.05 | 15.62 | 0.04 | ||
572.40 | 16.51 | 0.08 | 15.94 | 0.04 | 15.66 | 0.04 | ||
573.40 | 16.58 | 0.08 | 15.98 | 0.04 | 15.66 | 0.04 | ||
574.40 | 16.57 | 0.06 | 15.98 | 0.04 | 15.73 | 0.04 |
JD 2457000+ | ![]() |
![]() |
JD 2457000+ | ![]() |
![]() |
544.17 | 15.55 | 0.06 | 562.39 | 15.46 | 0.05 |
544.17 | 15.56 | 0.07 | 563.39 | 15.46 | 0.05 |
546.38 | 15.30 | 0.05 | 563.39 | 15.55 | 0.05 |
546.38 | 15.32 | 0.04 | 564.39 | 15.42 | 0.04 |
547.43 | 15.27 | 0.04 | 564.39 | 15.46 | 0.07 |
547.43 | 15.24 | 0.04 | 569.41 | 15.49 | 0.04 |
548.39 | 15.30 | 0.03 | 569.41 | 15.52 | 0.03 |
548.39 | 15.30 | 0.04 | 570.39 | 15.59 | 0.04 |
549.39 | 15.28 | 0.04 | 572.39 | 15.57 | 0.04 |
549.39 | 15.31 | 0.03 | 573.39 | 15.62 | 0.03 |
550.39 | 15.31 | 0.04 | 574.39 | 15.62 | 0.03 |
550.41 | 15.30 | 0.04 | 576.39 | 15.70 | 0.04 |
554.55 | 15.33 | 0.04 | 576.39 | 15.68 | 0.03 |
554.55 | 15.36 | 0.04 | 577.39 | 15.69 | 0.04 |
555.39 | 15.31 | 0.04 | 578.42 | 15.71 | 0.03 |
556.39 | 15.36 | 0.04 | 578.42 | 15.70 | 0.04 |
557.39 | 15.39 | 0.05 | 579.39 | 15.71 | 0.04 |
557.39 | 15.38 | 0.04 | 579.39 | 15.74 | 0.03 |
558.39 | 15.43 | 0.06 | 580.39 | 15.74 | 0.04 |
558.39 | 15.42 | 0.05 | 580.39 | 15.71 | 0.04 |
559.39 | 15.41 | 0.04 | 585.30 | 15.81 | 0.07 |
559.39 | 15.39 | 0.04 | 585.31 | 15.80 | 0.07 |
560.39 | 15.42 | 0.04 | 588.19 | 15.78 | 0.10 |
560.39 | 15.45 | 0.04 | 597.16 | 16.01 | 0.07 |
561.39 | 15.43 | 0.04 | 643.13 | 16.73 | 0.10 |
561.39 | 15.48 | 0.04 | 674.65 | 17.79 | 0.11 |
562.39 | 15.48 | 0.04 |
The brightness decline after maximum in the and
bands was
linear with the rate 0.014 mag/day until JD 2457630, then the rate
increased to 0.026 mag/day. Gaia observations show that such
decline continued for at least 100 days after the end of our
observations.
The absolute -band light curve of SN 2016ehw is presented in
Fig. 3, the light curves of eight SNe IIn are plotted for
comparison. The distance modulus
for SN 2016ehw was
computed based on the reported redshift and
km (s
Mpc)
, and we used galactic extinction
from the
NED database4. The data on
eight SNe IIn were taken from Turatto et al. (1993), Rigon et al.
(2003), Pastorello et al. (2002), Kankare et al. (2012), Hicken et
al. (2017), Germany et al. (2004), Tsvetkov (2008), Tsvetkov et
al. (2016).
![]() |
Fig. 2. The light curves of SN 2016ehw. Dots show the data obtained with the 60-cm telescope, circles are the results from the MASTER telescopes. |
![]() |
Fig. 3. The absolute R-band light curves of SN 2016ehw compared to those for eight SNe IIn. Black dots and circles represent data from the 60-cm telescope and MASTER telescopes, respectively. |
![]() |
Fig. 4. The color curves of SN 2016ehw compared to those for eight SNe IIn. The color coding is the same as in Fig. 3. |
The comparison shows that SN 2016ehw is quite a typical object of the class IIn, concerning the maximum luminosity and the shape of the light curve. It is best matched by SNe 1988Z, 1995G, 1999E, and 2009kn.
The color curves for the same objects are compared in Fig. 4. The
colors of all the SNe were corrected only for the galactic
reddening. The best match for the color curves of SN 2016ehw is
SN 2009kn. The shape of the color curves is quite similar for most
of the objects, but the color curve for SN 2009kr exhibits
quite a different shape. The comparison allows us to suppose that
most of the SNe, including SN 2016ehw, suffered little extinction
in their host galaxies. The presence of extinction may be
suspected for SN 2009kn and, perhaps, SN 1999E. We also note that
the
color of SN 2016ehw at late stage was significantly
redder that for all the other objects.
We conclude that SN 2016ehw is a quite typical SN IIn, its maximum luminosity and the shape of its light and color curves are similar to those for many other SNe of this class.
References:
Germany, L.M., Reiss, D.J., Schmidt, B.P., et al., 2004, Astron. and Astrophys., 415, 863
Hicken, M., Friedman, A.S., Blondin, S., et al., 2017, ApJS, 233, 6
Kankare, E., Ergon, M., Bufano, F., et al., 2012, MNRAS, 424, 85
Landolt, A., 1992, Astron. J., 104, 340
Lipunov, V., Kornilov, V., Gorbovskoy, E., et al., 2010, Advances in Astronomy, article id. 349171
Pastorello, A., Turatto, M., Benetti, S., et al., 2002, MNRAS, 330, 844
Rigon, L., Turatto, M., Benetti, S., et al., 2003, MNRAS, 340, 191
Schlegel, E.M., 1990, MNRAS, 244, 269
Tsvetkov, D.Yu., 2008, Peremennye Zvezdy/Variable Stars, 28, No.6
Tsvetkov, D.Yu., Shugarov, S.Yu., Volkov, I.M., 2016, Contrib. Astron. Obs. Skalnate Pleso, 46, 87
Turatto, M., Cappellaro, E., Danziger, I. J., et al., 1993, MNRAS, 262, 128
Vladimirov, V., Lipunov, V., Gabovich, A., et al., 2016, ATel, 9119