The Radio Evolution of SN 2001gd
Christopher J. Stockdale, Christopher L. Williams, Kurt W. Weiler,, Nino Panagia, Richard A. Sramek, Schuyler D. Van Dyk, and Matthew T. Kelley

TL;DR
This paper reports multi-frequency radio observations of Supernova 2001gd over several years, analyzing its radio light curves to understand the supernova's interaction with its circumstellar medium and comparing its evolution to other Type IIb supernovae.
Contribution
It provides detailed radio light curve analysis of SN 2001gd, modeling its evolution and identifying a transition in shock interaction with circumstellar material, based on long-term observational data.
Findings
Radio emission consistent with nonthermal model and thermal CSM absorption.
Detection of a steep decline in radio flux after ~550 days.
Evidence of shock front transitioning into a less dense circumstellar region.
Abstract
We present the results of observations of the radio emission from Supernova 2001gd in NGC 5033 from 2002 February 8 through 2006 September 25. The data were obtained using the Very Large Array at wavelengths of 1.3 cm (22.4 GHz), 2 cm (14.9 GHz), 3.6 cm (8.4 GHz), 6 cm (4.9 GHz), and 20 cm (1.5 GHz), with one upper limit at 90 cm (0.3 GHz). In addition, one detection has been provided by the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 21 cm (1.4 GHz). SN 2001gd was discovered in the optical well past maximum light, so that it was not possible to obtain many of the early radio "turn-on" measurements which are important for estimating the local circumstellar medium (CSM) properties. Only at 20 cm were turn-on data available. However, our analysis and fitting of the radio light curves, and the assumption that the Type IIb SN 2001gd resembles the much better studied Type IIb SN 1993J, enables us to…
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