OKC colloquia

Fantastic Beasts (& Where to Find Them): Superluminous Supernovae from Pan-STARRS to ZTF

by Dr Ragnhild Lunnan (SU Astro)

Europe/Stockholm
Fysikum equipment

Fysikum equipment

https://stockholmuniversity.zoom.us/j/62320153507
Description

Wide-field optical time-domain surveys provide an opportunity to discover and decipher new types of cosmic explosions. One such discovery in the past decade is the class of "superluminous" supernovae (SLSNe), which have bolometric luminosities 10-100 times those of normal core-collapse and Type Ia SN, and are preferentially found in low-metallicity and highly star-forming dwarf galaxies. These SLSNe represent a challenge both to our understanding of the deaths of the most massive stars, of star formation and stellar evolution in low-metallicity environments, and of the physics of powering the optical emission in supernovae. In this talk, I will present results from several recent and ongoing transient surveys, addressing the nature of SLSNe from two angles: 1) characterizing the explosions themselves and comparing the observed properties to model predictions, and 2) constraining the progenitor population through a comprehensive study of SLSN host galaxy environments.