Abstract

The spectral data on S Andromedae, or SN 1885A, which indicate that it was a type I supernova, are reexamined, and it is concluded that SN 1885A belongs to a supernova class distinct from types SN Ia and SN Ib. The light curve had a rapid rise to maximum, a rapid postmaximum decline, and a large magnitude difference between maximum and 150 days postmaximum, compared to other type I events. SN 1885A was probably a low-mass explosion, ejecting 0.1-0.3 solar mass of matter mostly in the form of Ni-56. This suggests that it left behind a compact remnant, either a neutron star or a white dwarf.

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