SN 2004gt
Appearance
Event type | Supernova |
---|---|
Ic[1] | |
Constellation | Corvus |
Right ascension | 12h 01m 50.37s[2] |
Declination | −18° 52′ 12.7″[2] |
Epoch | J2000.0 |
Galactic coordinates | 286.9460 +42.4568 (34" W, 10" S) |
Distance | 63 Mly (19.2 Mpc)[3] |
Host | NGC 4038 |
Peak apparent magnitude | 14.9[2] |
Other designations | SN 2004gt |
SN 2004GT was a type Ic supernova that happened in the interacting galaxy NGC 4038 on December 12, 2004. The event occurred in a region of condensed matter in the western spiral arm.[2] The progenitor was not identified from older images of the galaxy, and is either a type WC Wolf-Rayet star with a mass over 40 times that of the Sun, or a star 20 to 40 times as massive as the Sun in a binary star system.[3]
References
- ^ Modjaz, M.; et al. (May 2014), "Optical Spectra of 73 Stripped-envelope Core-collapse Supernovae", The Astronomical Journal, 147 (5): 99–116, arXiv:1405.1910, Bibcode:2014AJ....147...99M, doi:10.1088/0004-6256/147/5/99, S2CID 119235537, 99.
- ^ a b c d Monard, L. A. G.; et al. (December 2004), Green, D. W. E. (ed.), "Supernovae 2004gt, 2004gu, 2004gv", IAU Circular, 1 (8454), Bibcode:2004IAUC.8454....1M.
- ^ a b Maund, Justyn R.; et al. (September 2005), "Luminosity and Mass Limits for the Progenitor of the Type Ic Supernova 2004gt in NGC 4038", The Astrophysical Journal, 630 (1): L33–L36, arXiv:astro-ph/0506436, Bibcode:2005ApJ...630L..33M, doi:10.1086/491620, S2CID 17375474.