July 2026 • 2026ApJ..1005...81V
Abstract
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We provide a characterization of the red supergiant (RSG) progenitor candidate for the nearby Type II-plateau supernova (SN) 2025pht in NGC 1637. The star was first detectable in 2001 by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and then again in a dozen bands by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) in 2024. This "quasi-snapshot" of the star's nature almost immediately prior to explosion is unprecedented. The RSG varied in brightness, and we posit that it could have been a pulsating variable, possibly with a long period of ∼660 days. The largest uncertainty is the host-galaxy distance, which we establish to be 11.67 ± 0.27 Mpc. The star was also heavily extinguished by interstellar dust internal to the host, with visual extinction AV(host) ≍ 1.7 mag (total AV(tot) ≍ 1.8 mag). Dust radiative-transfer modeling reveals the star's circumstellar medium to be quite dusty and silicate-rich, yielding a bolometric luminosity as high as
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