Early phase observations of extremely luminous Type Ia Supernova 2009dc
Abstract
We present early phase observations in optical and near-infrared wavelengths for the extremely luminous Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2009dc. The decline rate of the light curve is m15(B)=0.65 0.03, which is one of the slowest among SNe Ia. The peak V-band absolute magnitude is MV=-19.90 0.15 mag even if the host extinction is AV=0 mag. It reaches MV=-20.19 0.19 mag for the host extinction of AV=0.29 mag as inferred from the observed Na i D line absorption in the host. Our JHKs-band photometry shows that the SN is one of the most luminous SNe Ia also in near-infrared wavelengths. These results indicate that SN 2009dc belongs to the most luminous class of SNe Ia, like SN 2003fg and SN 2006gz. We estimate the ejected 56Ni mass of 1.2 0.3 for no host extinction case (or 1.6 0.4 M for the host extinction of AV=0.29 mag). The C ii λ6580 absorption line keeps visible until a week after maximum, which diminished in SN 2006gz before its maximum brightness. The line velocity of Si ii λ6355 is about 8000 km s-1 around the maximum, being considerably slower than that of SN 2006gz, while comparable to that of SN 2003fg. The velocity of the C ii line is almost comparable to that of the Si ii. The presence of the carbon line suggests that thick unburned C+O layers remain after the explosion. SN 2009dc is a plausible candidate of the super-Chandrasekhar mass SNe Ia.
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