SN2018kzr: A Rapidly Declining Transient from the Destruction of a White Dwarf

McBrien, Owen R. and Smartt, Stephen J. and Chen, Ting-Wan and Inserra, Cosimo and Gillanders, James H. and Sim, Stuart A. and Jerkstrand, Anders and Rest, Armin and Valenti, Stefano and Roy, Rupak and Gromadzki, Mariusz and Taubenberger, Stefan and Flörs, Andreas and Huber, Mark E. and Chambers, Ken C. and Gal-Yam, Avishay and Young, David R. and Nicholl, Matt and Kankare, Erkki and Smith, Ken W. and Maguire, Kate and Mandel, Ilya and Prentice, Simon and Rodríguez, Ósmar and Garcia, Jonathan Pineda and Gutiérrez, Claudia P. and Galbany, Lluís and Barbarino, Cristina and Clark, Peter S. J. and Sollerman, Jesper and Kulkarni, Shrinivas R. and De, Kishalay and Buckley, David A. H. and Rau, Arne (2019) SN2018kzr: A Rapidly Declining Transient from the Destruction of a White Dwarf. The Astrophysical Journal, 885 (1). L23. ISSN 2041-8213

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Abstract

We present SN2018kzr, the fastest declining supernova-like transient, second only to the kilonova, AT2017gfo. SN2018kzr is characterized by a peak magnitude of Mr = −17.98, a peak bolometric luminosity of ∼1.4 × 1043 erg s−1, and a rapid decline rate of 0.48 ± 0.03 mag day−1 in the r band. The bolometric luminosity evolves too quickly to be explained by pure 56Ni heating, necessitating the inclusion of an alternative powering source. Incorporating the spin-down of a magnetized neutron star adequately describes the lightcurve and we estimate a small ejecta mass of Mej = 0.10 ± 0.05 M⊙. Our spectral modeling suggests the ejecta is composed of intermediate mass elements including O, Si, and Mg and trace amounts of Fe-peak elements, which disfavors a binary neutron star merger. We discuss three explosion scenarios for SN2018kzr, given the low ejecta mass, intermediate mass element composition, and high likelihood of additional powering—the core collapse of an ultra-stripped progenitor, the accretion induced collapse (AIC) of a white dwarf, and the merger of a white dwarf and neutron star. The requirement for an alternative input energy source favors either the AIC with magnetar powering or a white dwarf–neutron star merger with energy from disk wind shocks.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: EP Archives > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 29 May 2023 04:13
Last Modified: 17 Jan 2024 03:57
URI: http://research.send4journal.com/id/eprint/2223

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