SN 1997bs in M66: Another Extragalactic η Carinae Analog? (original) (raw)
Abstract
We report on SN 1997bs in NGC 3627 (M66), the first supernova discovered by the Lick Observatory Supernova Search using the 0.75 m Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT). Based on its early-time optical spectrum, SN 1997bs was classified as Type IIn. However, from the BVRI light curves obtained by KAIT early in the supernova's evolution, and F555W and F814W light curves obtained from Hubble Space Telescope archival WFPC2 images at late times, we question the identification of SN 1997bs as a bona fide supernova. We believe that it is more likely a superoutburst of a very massive luminous blue variable star, analogous to η Carinae, and similar to SN 1961V in NGC 1058 (Filippenko et al. 1995 AJ, 110, 2261) and SN 1954J (``Variable 12'') in NGC 2403 (Humphreys & Davidson 1994 PASP, 106, 1025). The progenitor may have survived the outburst, since the SN is seen in early 1998 at mF555W=23.4, about 0.5 mag fainter than the progenitor identified by Van Dyk et al. (1999, AJ, 118, 2331) in a prediscovery image. Based on analysis of its environment in the Hubble Space Telescope images, the progenitor was not in an H II region or association of massive stars. The recent discovery of additional objects with properties similar to those of SN 1997bs suggests that the heterogeneous class of Type IIn supernovae consists in part of ``impostors.'' Based in part on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained from the data archive of the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555.