- Whitesides, L;
- Lunnan, R;
- Kasliwal, MM;
- Perley, DA;
- Corsi, A;
- Cenko, SB;
- Blagorodnova, N;
- Cao, Y;
- Cook, DO;
- Doran, GB;
- Frederiks, DD;
- Fremling, C;
- Hurley, K;
- Karamehmetoglu, E;
- Kulkarni, SR;
- Leloudas, G;
- Masci, F;
- Nugent, PE;
- Ritter, A;
- Rubin, A;
- Savchenko, V;
- Sollerman, J;
- Svinkin, DS;
- Taddia, F;
- Vreeswijk, P;
- Wozniak, P
Wide-field surveys are discovering a growing number of rare transients whose physical origin is not yet well understood. Here we present optical and UV data and analysis of intermediate Palomar Transient Factory (iPTF) 16asu, a luminous, rapidly evolving, high-velocity, stripped-envelope supernova (SN). With a rest-frame rise time of just four days and a peak absolute magnitude of Mg = -20.4 mag, the light curve of iPTF 16asu is faster and more luminous than that of previous rapid transients. The spectra of iPTF 16asu show a featureless blue continuum near peak that develops into an SN Ic-BL spectrum on the decline. We show that while the late-time light curve could plausibly be powered by 56Ni decay, the early emission requires a different energy source. Nondetections in the X-ray and radio strongly constrain the energy coupled to relativistic ejecta to be at most comparable to the class of low-luminosity gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We suggest that the early emission may have been powered by either a rapidly spinning-down magnetar or by shock breakout in an extended envelope of a very energetic explosion. In either scenario a central engine is required, making iPTF 16asu an intriguing transition object between superluminous SNe, SNe Ic-BL, and low-luminosity GRBs.