GeminiFocus April 2016 | Page 6

Extending the Search with GMOS Figure 2. (Top): Hα evolution of SN 2011ja during the first 8 months. The degredation of the red peak at ~2,500 km/s is a sign of dust formation. (Bottom): Full spectroscopic evolution of SN 2011ja over the first two years. Over the past decade, our team has been using ground- and space-based optical and IR imaging and spectroscopy to look for signatures of dust formation in young CCSNe. In particular the size and sensitivity of GMOS has allowed us to follow a collection of objects for years after explosion in a search for the three telltale signs of grain condensation. First, as dust forms, the optical luminosity will decrease while almost simultaneously the near-infrared (NIR) will increase, as the dust grains absorb the shorter wavelength light and re-emit it in the IR. Grain formation will also alter the optical spectrum, creating asymmetric and blue-shifted lines as the dust grains attenuate the red (receding) side of the ejecta preferentially. And while we initially believed that the dust grains could only condense 300-600 days after explosion (when the ejecta had expanded and cooled) there have been more and more confirmed cases of dust forming much earlier, within 100 days of explosion. An early onset of dust formation can occur when shocks interact with nearby circumstellar material (CSM), creating an area known as the cool dense shell (CDS) with temperatures and densities appropriate for grain growth. This not only allows a separate channel for dust formation in CCSNe, but can also reveal important properties of SN evolution and progenitor mass loss. In February 2012, we also began using GMOS in an extensive observing campaign on SN 2011ja in NGC 4945 (F