Bibcode
Vinkó, J.; Takáts, K.; Sárneczky, K.; Szabó, Gy. M.; Mészáros, Sz.; Csorvási, R.; Szalai, T.; Gáspár, A.; Pál, A.; Csizmadia, Sz.; Kóspál, A.; Rácz, M.; Kun, M.; Csák, B.; Fürész, G.; DeBond, H.; Grunhut, J.; Thomson, J.; Mochnacki, S.; Koktay, T.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 369, Issue 4, pp. 1780-1796.
Advertised on:
7
2006
Citations
69
Refereed citations
61
Description
New BV RI photometry and optical spectroscopy of the Type IIp supernova
2004dj in NGC 2403, obtained during the first year since discovery, are
presented. The progenitor cluster, Sandage 96, is also detected on
pre-explosion frames. The light curve indicates that the explosion
occurred about 30d before discovery, and the plateau phase lasted about
+110 +/- 20 d after that. The plateau-phase spectra have been modelled
with the SYNOW spectral synthesis code using H, NaI, TiII, ScII, FeII
and BaI lines. The SN distance is inferred from the expanding
photosphere method and the standard candle method applicable for SNeIIp.
They resulted in distances that are consistent with each other as well
as earlier Cepheid and Tully-Fisher distances. The average distance, D =
3.47 +/- 0.29 Mpc is proposed for SN 2004dj and NGC 2403. The nickel
mass produced by the explosion is estimated as ~0.02 +/- 0.01
Msolar. The spectral energy distribution of the progenitor
cluster is reanalysed by fitting population synthesis models to our
observed BV RI data supplemented by U and JHK magnitudes from the
literature. The χ2 minimization revealed a possible
`young' solution with cluster age Tcl = 8 Myr, and an `old'
solution with Tcl = 20-30 Myr. The `young' solution would
imply a progenitor mass M > 20 Msolar, which is higher
than the previously detected progenitor masses for Type II SNe.
Based on observations obtained at David Dunlap Observatory (Canada), F.
L. Whipple Observatory (USA), Konkoly Observatory and Szeged Observatory
(Hungary).
E-mail: vinko [at] physx.u-szeged.hu (vinko[at]physx[dot]u-szeged[dot]hu)