Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
A spectrum of the recent supernova SN 1984l in NGC 991 taken near maximum light is presented. The spectrum is very similar to that of SN 1983n in M83, thus establishing a class of precisely defined peculiar Type I supernova. These supernovae are less luminous than classical Type I events, by perhaps a factor of 4, but seem to have similar photospheric velocities and light curves with peaks of similar width, and they may all be associated with Population I regions. These features lead to the conclusion that peculiar Type I supernovae eject less radioactive Ni-56, but a similar total mass to classical Type I supernovae, and hence that they derive most of their kinetic energy from core collapse rather than thermonuclear burning. If this is the case, their progenitors are probably moderately massive stars, 10-20 solar masses, which explode by the same mechanism as Type II supernovae but which have lost their hydrogen envelopes by winds or mass exchange.
Wheeler et al. (Mon,) studied this question.