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The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Cosmological Constraints from Measurements of Type Ia Supernovae Discovered During the First 1.5 Yr of the Pan-STARRS1 Survey

Armin Rest; D. Scolnic; Ryan J. Foley; M. Huber; Ryan Chornock; Gautham S. Narayan; John L. Tonry; Edo Berger; Alicia M. Soderberg; Christopher W. Stubbs; Adam G. Riess; Robert P. Kirshner; S. J. Smartt; Edward F. Schlafly; Steven A. Rodney; M. T. Botticella; D. Brout; Peter M. Challis; Ian Czekala; Maria Rebecca Drout; Michael J. Hudson; R. Kotak; C. Leibler; R. Lunnan; G. H. Marion; M. McCrum; D. Milisavljevic; Andrea Pastorello; Nathan Edward Sanders; K. W. Smith

We present griz P1 light curves of 146 spectroscopically confirmed Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia; 0.03 < z < 0.65) discovered during the first 1.5 yr of the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey. The Pan-STARRS1 natural photometric system is determined by a combination of on-site measurements of the instrument response function and observations of spectrophotometric standard stars. We find that the systematic uncertainties in the photometric system are currently 1.2% without accounting for the uncertainty in the Hubble Space Telescope Calspec definition of the AB system. A Hubble diagram is constructed with a subset of 113 out of 146 SNe Ia that pass our light curve quality cuts. The cosmological fit to 310 SNe Ia (113 PS1 SNe Ia + 222 light curves from 197 low-z SNe Ia), using only supernovae (SNe) and assuming a constant dark energy equation of state and flatness, yields . When combined with BAO+CMB(Planck)+H 0, the analysis yields and including all identified systematics. The value of w is inconsistent with the cosmological constant value of –1 at the 2.3σ level. Tension endures after removing either the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) or the H 0 constraint, though it is strongest when including the H 0 constraint. If we include WMAP9 cosmic microwave background (CMB) constraints instead of those from Planck, we find , which diminishes the discord to <2σ. We cannot conclude whether the tension with flat ΛCDM is a feature of dark energy, new physics, or a combination of chance and systematic errors. The full Pan-STARRS1 SN sample with ~three times as many SNe should provide more conclusive results.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

Ultra-bright optical transients are linked with type IC supernovae.

Andrea Pastorello; S. J. Smartt; M. T. Botticella; K. Maguire; M. Fraser; K. W. Smith; R. Kotak; L. Magill; S. Valenti; D. R. Young; S. Gezari; Fabio Bresolin; R.-P. Kudritzki; Dale Andrew Howell; Armin Rest; N. Metcalfe; Seppo Mattila; E. Kankare; Kuiyun Huang; Yuji Urata; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; T. Dombeck; H. Flewelling; T. Grav; J. N. Heasley; K. W. Hodapp; N. Kaiser; Gerard A. Luppino; Robert H. Lupton

Recent searches by unbiased, wide-field surveys have uncovered a group of extremely luminous optical transients. The initial discoveries of SN 2005ap by the Texas Supernova Search and SCP-06F6 in a deep Hubble pencil beam survey were followed by the Palomar Transient Factory confirmation of host redshifts for other similar transients. The transients share the common properties of high optical luminosities (peak magnitudes ~-21 to -23), blue colors, and a lack of H or He spectral features. The physical mechanism that produces the luminosity is uncertain, with suggestions ranging from jet-driven explosion to pulsational pair instability. Here, we report the most detailed photometric and spectral coverage of an ultra-bright transient (SN 2010gx) detected in the Pan-STARRS 1 sky survey. In common with other transients in this family, early-time spectra show a blue continuum and prominent broad absorption lines of O II. However, about 25 days after discovery, the spectra developed type Ic supernova features, showing the characteristic broad Fe II and Si II absorption lines. Detailed, post-maximum follow-up may show that all SN 2005ap and SCP-06F6 type transients are linked to supernovae Ic. This poses problems in understanding the physics of the explosions: there is no indication from late-time photometry that the luminosity is powered by 56Ni, the broad light curves suggest very large ejected masses, and the slow spectral evolution is quite different from typical Ic timescales. The nature of the progenitor stars and the origin of the luminosity are intriguing and open questions.


Nature | 2013

Slowly fading super-luminous supernovae that are not pair-instability explosions

M. Nicholl; S. J. Smartt; A. Jerkstrand; C. Inserra; M. McCrum; R. Kotak; M. Fraser; D. Wright; Ting-Wan Chen; K. W. Smith; D. R. Young; S. A. Sim; S. Valenti; D. A. Howell; Fabio Bresolin; R.-P. Kudritzki; John L. Tonry; M. Huber; Armin Rest; Andrea Pastorello; L. Tomasella; Enrico Cappellaro; Stefano Benetti; Seppo Mattila; E. Kankare; T. Kangas; G. Leloudas; Jesper Sollerman; F. Taddia; Edo Berger

Super-luminous supernovae that radiate more than 1044 ergs per second at their peak luminosity have recently been discovered in faint galaxies at redshifts of 0.1–4. Some evolve slowly, resembling models of ‘pair-instability’ supernovae. Such models involve stars with original masses 140–260 times that of the Sun that now have carbon–oxygen cores of 65–130 solar masses. In these stars, the photons that prevent gravitational collapse are converted to electron–positron pairs, causing rapid contraction and thermonuclear explosions. Many solar masses of 56Ni are synthesized; this isotope decays to 56Fe via 56Co, powering bright light curves. Such massive progenitors are expected to have formed from metal-poor gas in the early Universe. Recently, supernova 2007bi in a galaxy at redshift 0.127 (about 12 billion years after the Big Bang) with a metallicity one-third that of the Sun was observed to look like a fading pair-instability supernova. Here we report observations of two slow-to-fade super-luminous supernovae that show relatively fast rise times and blue colours, which are incompatible with pair-instability models. Their late-time light-curve and spectral similarities to supernova 2007bi call the nature of that event into question. Our early spectra closely resemble typical fast-declining super-luminous supernovae, which are not powered by radioactivity. Modelling our observations with 10–16 solar masses of magnetar-energized ejecta demonstrates the possibility of a common explosion mechanism. The lack of unambiguous nearby pair-instability events suggests that their local rate of occurrence is less than 6 × 10−6 times that of the core-collapse rate.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Rapidly-Evolving and Luminous Transients from Pan-STARRS1

Maria Rebecca Drout; Ryan Chornock; Alicia M. Soderberg; Nathan Edward Sanders; R. McKinnon; Armin Rest; Ryan J. Foley; D. Milisavljevic; Raffaella Margutti; Edo Berger; Michael L. Calkins; William. Fong; S. Gezari; M. Huber; E. Kankare; Robert P. Kirshner; C. Leibler; R. Lunnan; Seppo Mattila; G. H. Marion; Gautham S. Narayan; A. G. Riess; Kathy Roth; D. Scolnic; S. J. Smartt; John L. Tonry; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; K. W. Hodapp; Robert Jedicke

In the past decade, several rapidly evolving transients have been discovered whose timescales and luminosities are not easily explained by traditional supernovae (SNe) models. The sample size of these objects has remained small due, at least in part, to the challenges of detecting short timescale transients with traditional survey cadences. Here we present the results from a search within the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey (PS1-MDS) for rapidly evolving and luminous transients. We identify 10 new transients with a time above half-maximum (t 1/2) of less than 12 days and –16.5 > M > –20 mag. This increases the number of known events in this region of SN phase space by roughly a factor of three. The median redshift of the PS1-MDS sample is z = 0.275 and they all exploded in star-forming galaxies. In general, the transients possess faster rise than decline timescale and blue colors at maximum light (g P1 – r P1 lsim –0.2). Best-fit blackbodies reveal photospheric temperatures/radii that expand/cool with time and explosion spectra taken near maximum light are dominated by a blue continuum, consistent with a hot, optically thick, ejecta. We find it difficult to reconcile the short timescale, high peak luminosity (L > 1043 erg s–1), and lack of UV line blanketing observed in many of these transients with an explosion powered mainly by the radioactive decay of 56Ni. Rather, we find that many are consistent with either (1) cooling envelope emission from the explosion of a star with a low-mass extended envelope that ejected very little (<0.03 M ☉) radioactive material, or (2) a shock breakout within a dense, optically thick, wind surrounding the progenitor star. After calculating the detection efficiency for objects with rapid timescales in the PS1-MDS we find a volumetric rate of 4800-8000 events yr–1 Gpc–3 (4%-7% of the core-collapse SN rate at z = 0.2).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

DETECTION OF AN OUTBURST ONE YEAR PRIOR TO THE EXPLOSION OF SN 2011ht

M. Fraser; M. R. Magee; R. Kotak; S. J. Smartt; K. W. Smith; J. Polshaw; Andrew J. Drake; T. Boles; Chien-Hsiu Lee; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; P. W. Draper; H. Flewelling; K. W. Hodapp; N. Kaiser; R.-P. Kudritzki; E. A. Magnier; P. A. Price; John L. Tonry; R. J. Wainscoat; C. Waters

Using imaging from the Pan-STARRS1 survey, we identify a precursor outburst at 287 and 170 days prior to the reported explosion of the purported Type IIn supernova (SN) 2011ht. In the Pan-STARRS data, a source coincident with SN 2011ht is detected exclusively in the z_(P1) and y_(P1)-bands. An absolute magnitude of M_z ≃ –11.8 suggests that this was an outburst of the progenitor star. Unfiltered, archival Catalina Real Time Transient Survey images also reveal a coincident source from at least 258 to 138 days before the main event. We suggest that the outburst is likely to be an intrinsically red eruption, although we cannot conclusively exclude a series of erratic outbursts which were observed only in the redder bands by chance. This is only the fourth detection of an outburst prior to a claimed SN, and lends credence to the possibility that many more interacting transients have pre-explosion outbursts, which have been missed by current surveys.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

SUPERNOVA 2009kf: AN ULTRAVIOLET BRIGHT TYPE IIP SUPERNOVA DISCOVERED WITH PAN-STARRS 1 AND GALEX

M. T. Botticella; Carrie Trundle; Andrea Pastorello; Steven A. Rodney; Armin Rest; S. Gezari; S. J. Smartt; Gautham S. Narayan; M. E. Huber; John L. Tonry; D. R. Young; K. W. Smith; Fabio Bresolin; S. Valenti; R. Kotak; Seppo Mattila; E. Kankare; William Michael Wood-Vasey; Adam G. Riess; James D. Neill; Karl Forster; D. C. Martin; Christopher W. Stubbs; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; T. Dombeck; H. Flewelling; T. Grav; J. N. Heasley; K. W. Hodapp

We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of a luminous Type IIP Supernova (SN) 2009kf discovered by the Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1) survey and also detected by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer. The SN shows a plateau in its optical and bolometric light curves, lasting approximately 70 days in the rest frame, with an absolute magnitude of M_V = -18.4 mag. The P-Cygni profiles of hydrogen indicate expansion velocities of 9000 km s^(-1) at 61 days after discovery which is extremely high for a Type IIP SN. SN 2009kf is also remarkably bright in the near-ultraviolet (NUV) and shows a slow evolution 10-20 days after optical discovery. The NUV and optical luminosity at these epochs can be modeled with a blackbody with a hot effective temperature (T ~ 16,000 K) and a large radius (R ~ 1 × 10^(15) cm). The bright bolometric and NUV luminosity, the light curve peak and plateau duration, the high velocities, and temperatures suggest that 2009kf is a Type IIP SN powered by a larger than normal explosion energy. Recently discovered high-z SNe (0.7 < z < 2.3) have been assumed to be IIn SNe, with the bright UV luminosities due to the interaction of SN ejecta with a dense circumstellar medium. UV-bright SNe similar to SN 2009kf could also account for these high-z events, and its absolute magnitude M_(NUV) = -21.5 ± 0.5 mag suggests such SNe could be discovered out to z ~ 2.5 in the PS1 survey.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

SN 2015bn: A DETAILED MULTI-WAVELENGTH VIEW OF A NEARBY SUPERLUMINOUS SUPERNOVA

M. Nicholl; Edo Berger; S. J. Smartt; Raffaella Margutti; Atish Kamble; K. D. Alexander; T.-W. Chen; C. Inserra; I. Arcavi; P. K. Blanchard; R. Cartier; K. C. Chambers; Michael J. Childress; Ryan Chornock; P. S. Cowperthwaite; Maria Rebecca Drout; H. Flewelling; M. Fraser; Avishay Gal-Yam; L. Galbany; J. Harmanen; T. W.-S. Holoien; G. Hosseinzadeh; D. A. Howell; M. Huber; A. Jerkstrand; E. Kankare; C. S. Kochanek; Z.-Y. Lin; R. Lunnan

We present observations of SN 2015bn (= PS15ae = CSS141223-113342+004332 = MLS150211-113342+004333), a Type I superluminous supernova (SLSN) at redshift


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Selecting superluminous supernovae in faint galaxies from the first year of the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey

M. McCrum; S. J. Smartt; Armin Rest; K. W. Smith; R. Kotak; Steven A. Rodney; D. R. Young; Ryan Chornock; Edo Berger; Ryan J. Foley; M. Fraser; D. Wright; D. Scolnic; John L. Tonry; Yuji Urata; Kuiyun Huang; Andrea Pastorello; M. T. Botticella; S. Valenti; Seppo Mattila; E. Kankare; Daniel J. Farrow; M. Huber; Christopher W. Stubbs; Robert P. Kirshner; Fabio Bresolin; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; Peter W. Draper; H. Flewelling

z=0.1136


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

PS1-14bj: A Hydrogen-poor Superluminous Supernova with a Long Rise and Slow Decay.

R. Lunnan; Ryan Chornock; Edo Berger; D. Milisavljevic; David O. Jones; Armin Rest; Wen-fai Fong; Claes Fransson; Raffaella Margutti; Maria Rebecca Drout; P. K. Blanchard; Peter M. Challis; P. S. Cowperthwaite; Ryan J. Foley; Robert P. Kirshner; Nidia I. Morrell; Adam G. Riess; Kathy Roth; D. Scolnic; S. J. Smartt; K. W. Smith; V. A. Villar; K. C. Chambers; P. W. Draper; M. Huber; N. Kaiser; R.-P. Kudritzki; E. A. Magnier; N. Metcalfe; C. Waters

. As well as being one of the closest SLSNe I yet discovered, it is intrinsically brighter (


Science | 2015

The fastest unbound star in our Galaxy ejected by a thermonuclear supernova

Stephan Geier; Felix Fürst; E. Ziegerer; T. Kupfer; Ulrich Heber; Andreas Irrgang; Bin Wang; Zhenfeng Liu; Zhanwen Han; B Sesar; David Levitan; R. Kotak; E. A. Magnier; K. W. Smith; W. S. Burgett; K Chambers; H. A. Flewelling; N Kaiser; R Wainscoat; C. Waters

M_U\approx-23.1

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W. S. Burgett

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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N. Kaiser

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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K. W. Hodapp

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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