SN 2020tlf

Type II supernova that occurred 120 million light years away in the galaxy NGC 5731 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SN 2020tlf was a Type II supernova that occurred 120 million light years away in the galaxy NGC 5731. The supernova marked the first time that a red supergiant star had been observed before, during, and after the event,[2][1] being observed up to 130 days before.[2] The progenitor star was between 10 and 12 solar masses.

Event typeType IIn
Right ascension14h 40m 10.03s[1]
Declination42° 46 39.45[1]
Quick facts Event type, Constellation ...
SN 2020tlf
Light curves for SN 2020tlf in four photometric bands, plotted from data published by Jacobson-Galán et al. (2022)[1]
Event typeType IIn
ConstellationBoötes
Right ascension14h 40m 10.03s[1]
Declination42° 46 39.45[1]
EpochJ2000
Distance36.8±1.29 million pc[1]
Redshift0.008463±0.0003[1]
HostNGC 5731
Progenitor typeRed supergiant
Peak apparent magnitude15.89[1]
Close

Observations

The star was first observed by the Pan-STARRS telescope in the summer of 2020, with other telescopes such as ATLAS also observing it. It was initially believed that red supergiants were quiet before their demise; however, SN 2020tlf was observed emitting bright, intense radiation and ejecting massive amounts of gaseous material.[3][4] Observations were also made throughout the electromagnetic spectrum, such as in the X-ray, ultraviolet, infrared and radio wave spectrums.[1]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI