Bibcode
Fassia, A.; Meikle, W. P. S.; Vacca, W. D.; Kemp, S. N.; Walton, N. A.; Pollacco, D. L.; Smartt, S.; Oscoz, A.; Aragón-Salamanca, A.; Bennett, S.; Hawarden, T. G.; Alonso, A.; Alcalde, D.; Pedrosa, A.; Telting, J.; Arevalo, M. J.; Deeg, H. J.; Garzón, F.; Gómez-Roldán, A.; Gómez, G.; Gutiérrez, C. M.; López, S.; Rozas, M.; Serra-Ricart, M.; Zapatero-Osorio, M. R.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 318, Issue 4, pp. 1093-1104.
Advertised on:
11
2000
Citations
148
Refereed citations
130
Description
We present contemporaneous optical and infrared (IR) photometric
observations of the Type IIn SN 1998S covering the period between 11 and
146d after discovery. The IR data constitute the first ever IR light
curves of a Type IIn supernova. We use blackbody and spline fits to the
photometry to examine the luminosity evolution. During the first 2-3
months, the luminosity is dominated by the release of shock-deposited
energy in the ejecta. After ~100d the luminosity is powered mostly by
the deposition of radioactive decay energy from
0.15+/-0.05Msolar of 56Ni which was produced in
the explosion. We also report the discovery of an astonishingly high IR
excess, K-L'=2.5, that was present at day 130. We interpret this as
being due to thermal emission from dust grains in the vicinity of the
supernova. We argue that to produce such a high IR luminosity so soon
after the explosion, the dust must be pre-existing and so is located in
the circumstellar medium of the progenitor. The dust could be heated
either by the UV/optical flash (IR echo) or by the X-rays from the
interaction of the ejecta with the circumstellar material.