Bibcode
Hernandez, M.; Meikle, W. P. S.; Aparicio, A.; Benn, C. R.; Burleigh, M. R.; Chrysostomou, A. C.; Fernandes, A. J. L.; Geballe, T. R.; Hammersley, P. L.; Iglesias-Paramo, J.; James, D. J.; James, P. A.; Kemp, S. N.; Lister, T. A.; Martinez-Delgado, D.; Oscoz, A.; Pollacco, D. L.; Rozas, M.; Smartt, S. J.; Sorensen, P.; Swaters, R. A.; Telting, J. H.; Vacca, W. D.; Walton, N. A.; Zapatero-Osorio, M. R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 319, Issue 1, pp. 223-234.
Fecha de publicación:
11
2000
Número de citas
67
Número de citas referidas
62
Descripción
We present first-season infrared (IR) and optical photometry and
spectroscopy of the Type Ia Supernova 1998bu in M96. We also report
optical polarimetry of this event. SN 1998bu is one of the closest type
Ia supernovae of modern times, and the distance of its host galaxy is
well determined. We find that SN 1998bu is both photometrically and
spectroscopically normal. However, the extinction to this event is
unusually high, with AV = 1.0 ± 0.11. We find that SN
1998bu peaked at an intrinsic MV = -19.37 ± 0.23.
Adopting a distance modulus of 30.25 (Tanvir et al.) and using Phillips
et al.'s relations for the Hubble constant, we obtain H0 =
70.4 ± 4.3 km s-1 Mpc-1. Combination of our
IR photometry with those of Jha et al. provides one of the most complete
early-phase IR light curves for a SN Ia published so far. In particular,
SN 1998bu is the first normal SN Ia for which good pre-tBmax
IR coverage has been obtained. It reveals that the J, H and K light
curves peak about 5 days earlier than the flux in the B-band curve.