K2 Observations of SN 2018oh Reveal a Two-component Rising Light Curve for a Type Ia Supernova

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Dimitriadis, G.
Foley, Ryan J
Rest, A.
Kasen, D.
Piro, Anthony L
Jones, D. O.
Villar, A.
Narayan, G.
Coulter, David A.
Kilpatrick, Charles D.

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Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd.

Abstract

We present an exquisite 30 minute cadence Kepler (K2) light curve of the Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2018oh (ASASSN-18bt), starting weeks before explosion, covering the moment of explosion and the subsequent rise, and continuing past peak brightness. These data are supplemented by multi-color Panoramic Survey Telescope (Pan-STARRS1) and Rapid Response System 1 and Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory 4 m Dark Energy Camera (CTIO 4-m DECam) observations obtained within hours of explosion. The K2 light curve has an unusual two-component shape, where the flux rises with a steep linear gradient for the first few days, followed by a quadratic rise as seen for typical supernovae (SNe) Ia. This "flux excess" relative to canonical SN Ia behavior is confirmed in our i-band light curve, and furthermore, SN 2018oh is especially blue during the early epochs. The flux excess peaks 2.14 +- 0.04 days after explosion, has a FWHM of 3.12 +- 0.04 days, a blackbody temperature of T = 17,500_-9,000^+11,500 K, a peak luminosity of 4.3+- 0.2x 10^37erg s^-1, and a total integrated energy of 1.27+- 0.01x10^43erg. We compare SN 2018oh to several models that may provide additional heating at early times, including collision with a companion and a shallow concentration of radioactive nickel. While all of these models generally reproduce the early K2 light curve shape, we slightly favor a companion interaction, at a distance of ~2x10^12cm based on our early color measurements, although the exact distance depends on the uncertain viewing angle. Additional confirmation of a companion interaction in future modeling and observations of SN 2018oh would provide strong support for a single-degenerate progenitor system.

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Astrophysical Journal Letters

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Open Access

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