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The temporal evolution of the optical spectra of various types of supernovae
(SNe) is illustrated, in part to aid observers classifying supernova
candidates. Type II SNe are defined by the presence of hydrogen, and they
exhibit a very wide variety of photometric and spectroscopic properties. Among
hydrogen-deficient SNe (Type I), three subclasses are now known: those whose
early-time spectra show strong Si II (Ia), prominent He I (Ib), or neither Si
II nor He I (Ic). The late-time spectra of SNe Ia consist of a multitude of
blended emission lines of iron-group elements; in sharp contrast, those of SNe
Ib and SNe Ic (which are similar to each other) are dominated by several
relatively unblended lines of intermediate-mass elements. Although SNe Ia,
which result from the thermonuclear runaway of white dwarfs, constitute a
rather homogeneous subclass, important variations in their photometric and
spectroscopic properties are undeniably present. SNe Ib/Ic probably result from
core collapse in massive stars largely stripped of their hydrogen (Ib) and
helium (Ic) envelopes, and hence they are physically related to SNe II. Indeed,
the progenitors of some SNe II seem to have only a low-mass skin of hydrogen;
their spectra gradually evolve to resemble those of SNe Ib. In addition to the
two well-known photometric subclasses (linear and plateau) of SNe II, which may
exhibit minor spectroscopic differences, there is a new subclass (SNe IIn)
distinguished by relatively narrow emission lines with little or no P Cygni
absorption component and slowly declining light curves. These objects probably
have unusually dense circumstellar gas with which the ejecta interact.