SN 2007uy

Supernova discovered in 2007 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SN 2007uy was a supernova that occurred in the spiral galaxy NGC 2770. It was discovered by Yoji Hirose on December 31, 2007 from Chigasaki city in Japan,[4] approximately four days after the explosion.[1] The position of the supernova was offset 20.6 east and 15.5″ south of the galaxy's nucleus,[3] near a star-forming region.[5] It was identified as a Type Ib supernova from its spectrum a week before reaching maximum, and appeared the most similar to SN 2004gq.[2]

Event typeSupernova
DateDecember 31, 2007[3]
Right ascension09h 09m 35.28s[3]
Quick facts Event type, Date ...
SN 2007uy
Light curves for SN 2007uy in four photometric bands, plotted from data published by Roy et al. (2013)[1]
Event typeSupernova
Type Ib[2]
DateDecember 31, 2007[3]
ConstellationLynx
Right ascension09h 09m 35.28s[3]
Declination+33° 07 09.2[3]
EpochJ2000
Galactic coordinatesl = 191.58°, b = +42.2°[3]
Distance96.2 ± 5.9 Mly (29.5 ± 1.8 Mpc)[1]
Redshift0.0065[3]
HostNGC 2770[3]
Peak apparent magnitude17.2[3]
Total energy output~1.5×1051 erg[1]
Close

Emissions from SN 2007uy were detected from the X-ray to the radio band.[6] The light from this event was heavily reddened due to intervening dust in the host galaxy. This energetic explosion released ~1.5×1051 erg in energy and ejected a mass of 4.4 M.[1] The progenitor was likely a massive star that had been stripped of its hydrogen envelope by a binary companion.[5] There is no radio evidence of a relativistic jet of the type that would be associated with a gamma-ray burst.[6]

While interesting in its own right, SN 2007uy was overshadowed by SN 2008D, a supernova whose burst was observed serendipitously while SN 2007uy was being studied by Swift, something unprecedented in astronomy.[7] This second supernova occurred within ten days of the first.[6]

References

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