Authors
Ori Fox, Jennifer Andrews, Rick Arendt, Geoff Clayton, Eli Dwek, Alex Filippenko, Joel Johansson, Patrick Kelly, Kelsie Krafton, Tony Marston, Jon Mauerhan, Tamas Szalai, Schuyler Van Dyk
Publication date
2018/5
Journal
Spitzer Proposal
Pages
14098
Description
Over the past decade, our team has shown that a surprising number of different supernova (SN) subclasses have members that exhibit mid-infrared (mid-IR) emission from warm dust at late times (> 100 days post-explosion). This work has used Spitzer 3.6 and 4.5 micron imaging to constrain the dust origin and heating mechanisms, but a number of questions still remain. How much dust can SNe IIP produce in their ejecta? What progenitor can produce such extreme mass-loss events required to form the large, dense, pre-existing dust shells observed in so many cases? Many of these SNe remain bright today, in some cases more than a decade after discovery. Continued mid-IR monitoring is necessary to answer these questions by measuring the full extent of either the newly formed dust mass or pre-existing dust shell. Furthermore, Spitzer observations of both old and new SNe will provide up to date flux estimates …
Scholar articles
O Fox, J Andrews, R Arendt, G Clayton, E Dwek… - Spitzer Proposal, 2018