Observed Type II supernova colours from the Carnegie Supernova Project-I
Abstract
We present a study of observed Type II supernova (SN~II) colours using optical/near-infrared photometric data from the Carnegie Supernovae Project-I. We analyse four colours (B-V, u-g, g-r, and g-Y) and find that SN~II colour curves can be described by two linear regimes during the photospheric phase. The first (s 1,colour) is steeper and has a median duration of 40 days. The second, shallower slope (s 2,colour) lasts until the end of the "plateau" ( 80 days). The two slopes correlate in the sense that steeper initial colour curves also imply steeper colour curves at later phases. As suggested by recent studies, SNe~II form a continuous population of objects from the colour point of view as well. We investigate correlations between the observed colours and a range of photometric and spectroscopic parameters including the absolute magnitude, the V-band light-curve slopes, and metal-line strengths. We find that less luminous SNe~II appear redder, a trend that we argue is not driven by uncorrected host-galaxy reddening. While there is significant dispersion, we find evidence that redder SNe~II (mainly at early epochs) display stronger metal-line equivalent widths. Host-galaxy reddening does not appear to be a dominant parameter, neither driving observed trends nor dominating the dispersion in observed colours. Intrinsic SN~II colours are most probably dominated by photospheric temperature differences, with progenitor metallicity possibly playing a minor role. Such temperature differences could be related to differences in progenitor radius, together with the presence or absence of circumstellar material close to the progenitor stars.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.