Ben E. K. Sugerman, Jennifer E. Andrews, Michael J. Barlow, Geoffrey C. Clayton, Barbara Ercolano, Parviz Ghavamian, Robert C. Kennicutt Jr., Oliver Krause, Margaret Meixner, Masaaki Otsuka
We report optical and mid-infrared photometry of SN 1980K between 2004 and
2010, which show slow monotonic fading consistent with previous spectroscopic
and photometric observations made 8 to 17 years after outburst. The slow
rate-of-change over two decades suggests that this evolution may result from
scattered and thermal light echoes off of extended circumstellar material. We
present a semi- analytic dust radiative-transfer model that uses an empirically
corrected effective optical depth to provide a fast and robust alternative to
full Monte-Carlo radiative transfer modeling for homogenous dust at low to
intermediate optical depths. We find that unresolved echoes from a thin
circumstellar shell 14-15 lt-yr from the progenitor, and containing about 0.02
Msun of carbon-rich dust, can explain the broadband spectral and temporal
evolution. The size, mass and dust composition are in good agreement with the
contact discontinuity observed in scattered echoes around SN 1987A. The origin
of slowly-changing high-velocity [O I] and Halpha lines is also considered. We
propose an origin in shocked high-velocity metal-rich clumps of ejecta, rather
than arising in the impact of ejecta on slowly-moving circumstellar material,
as is the case with hot spots in SN 1987A.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.3075
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