Deep late-time observations of the supernova impostors SN 1954J and SN 1961V

Author:

Patton Rachel A1,Kochanek C S12,Adams S M3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State University, 140 West 18th Ave, Columbus OH 43210, USA

2. Centre for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics, The Ohio State University, 191 West Woodruff Avenue, Columbus OH 43210, USA

3. Cahill Centre for Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA 91125, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT SN 1954J in NGC 2403 and SN 1961V in NGC 1058 were two luminous transients whose definitive classification as either non-terminal eruptions or supernovae remains elusive. A critical question is whether a surviving star can be significantly obscured by dust formed from material ejected during the transient. We use three lines of argument to show that the candidate surviving stars are not significantly optically extinct (τ ≲ 1) by dust formed in the transients. First, we use SED fits to new HST optical and near-IR photometry. Secondly, neither source is becoming brighter as required by absorption from an expanding shell of ejected material. Thirdly, the ejecta masses implied by the Hα luminosities are too low to produce significant dust absorption. The latter two arguments hold independent of the dust properties. The Hα fluxes should also be declining with time as t−3, and this seems not to be observed. As a result, it seems unlikely that recently formed dust can be responsible for the present faintness of the sources compared to their progenitors, although this can be verified with the James Webb Space Telescope. This leaves three possibilities: (1) the survivors were misidentified; (2) they are intrinsically less luminous; (3) SN 1954J and SN 1961V were true supernovae.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

European Society of Anaesthesiology

Space Telescope Science Institute

University of Arizona

Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica

Max Planck Society

Ohio State University

University of Notre Dame

University of Minnesota

University of Virginia

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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