SN 1988Z was a prototypical type IIn supernova event in the equatorial constellation of Leo. The apparent host is an irregular galaxy with the designation MCG  03-28-22. It has a redshift of z equal to 0.0225. This was a very luminous supernova that faded unusually slowly and has remained detectable three decades after the event. It is one of the most radio and X-ray luminous supernova ever detected, and it has been extensively studied.

Observations

This event was discovered independently, both by C. Pollas at the Côte d'Azur Observatory on a photographic plate taken December 12, 1988, and by G. Candeo at the Asiago Astrophysical Observatory from a plate taken December 14. The supernova was already past maximum when it was discovered. A spectrum taken December 17 showed this was most likely a type II supernova.

This supernova displayed a number of unusual characteristics. It was unusually bright at maximum and showed very slow fading. There were strong, narrow emission lines caused by thick circumstellar material. Unlike a typical type II supernova, no P Cygni profiles or absorption lines were observed. Emission lines of neutral helium were also visible. The spectral lines displayed a complex structure that evolved over time. Decline in the Hydrogen-alpha line strength was unusually slow and lacked an explanation in terms of radioactive decay. The overall picture suggested interaction between the supernova ejecta and a dense circumstellar medium.

A year after the event, radio emission from the supernova was detected using the Very Large Array. The host galaxy shows a redshift of z equal to 0.022, making this the most distant radio supernova detected at that time. It was also one of the most luminous radio supernova discovered. The radio properties indicated a very massive progenitor star in the range of 20–30 M. In the late evolutionary stages of the star, it underwent a high rate of mass loss on the order of 10−4 M·yr−1, which created a dense circumstellar cocoon. In 1996, X-ray emission from the supernova was detected by ROSAT, making it the most distant supernova to be detected in this band. The estimated X-ray luminosity was 1041 erg·s−1, which is consistent with a supernova event within dense circumstellar material.

Most studies now favor a model of a very massive progenitor that ejected up to 10 M at a rate of around 10−3 M·yr−1 for a period of about 10,000 years prior to the explosion. The mass loss rate ramped up during the final millennium prior to core collapse.

References

Further reading


Comparison of 2014 SN 1978K spectrum with several typeII SNe observed

Sony1988Neuheiten

Sony1988Neuheiten

Vband light curves of typical individuals of each SN II subtype

Sony1988Neuheiten