Current Status of Intensive Monitoring Survey of Nearby Galaxies and Core-Collapse Supernovae Observational Research

  • Kim, Sophia (Seoul National University (SNU)) ;
  • Im, Myungshin (Seoul National University (SNU)) ;
  • Choi, Changsu (Korean Astronomy & Space Science Institute (KASI)) ;
  • Im, Gu (Seoul National University (SNU)) ;
  • Paek, Gregory S. (Seoul National University (SNU))
  • 발행 : 2021.10.13

초록

Intensive Monitoring Survey of Nearby Galaxies (IMSNG) is a program monitoring nearby galaxies with a high cadence within a day. The main goal of the project is to constrain the SNe explosion mechanism and properties of their progenitors by catching the early lights from the shock-heated cooling emission. The observation campaign began in 2014 with two 1-m class telescopes in the northern hemisphere. Now more than ten telescopes are monitoring galaxies with 60 IMSNG targets, which have a high probability of supernova explosion every night all around the world. Since the project started, the following observations have been carried out on 14 SNe Ia(including -pec), 27 core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe), and around 40 transients in other types. In this poster, we present the current status of IMSNG SNe data first and then focus more on the CCSNe. CCSNe are the explosion of massive stars, more massive than eight times of the Sun. They have been studied for more than a half decades but still have key questions to be solved, such as distinct types, the characteristics driving their diversity, and so on. Here, we show our ongoing studies of CCSNe in IMSNG, focusing on their usefulness as distance indicators and properties of early light curves.

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