Radio monitoring of NGC 7469: Late time radio evolution of SN 2000ft and the circumnuclear starburst in NGC 7469
M.A. Perez-Torres, A. Alberdi, L. Colina, J.M. Torrelles, N. Panagia,, A. Wilson, E. Kankare, S. Mattila

TL;DR
This study presents an eight-year radio monitoring of NGC 7469, revealing the late-time evolution of supernova SN 2000ft and insights into the circumnuclear starburst activity.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of SN 2000ft's late-time radio evolution and the interaction with stellar wind, offering new data on supernova remnants in NGC 7469.
Findings
SN 2000ft's radio decline follows its earlier optically thin phase.
The supernova interacts with stellar wind, not the interstellar medium.
No other luminous radio supernovae detected since 2000.
Abstract
We present the results of an eight-year long monitoring of the radio emission from the Luminous Infrared Galaxy (LIRG) NGC 7469, using 8.4 GHz Very Large Array (VLA) observations at 0.3'' resolution. Our monitoring shows that the late time evolution of the radio supernova SN 2000ft follows a decline very similar to that displayed at earlier times of its optically thin phase. The late time radio emission of SN 2000ft is therefore still being powered by its interaction with the presupernova stellar wind, and not with the interstellar medium (ISM). Indeed, the ram pressure of the presupernova wind is \rho_w v_w^2 \approx 7.6E-9 dyn/cm^2, at a supernova age of approximately 2127 days, which is significantly larger than the expected pressure of the ISM around SN 2000ft. At this age, the SN shock has reached a distance r_{sh \approx 0.06 pc, and our observations are probing the interaction of…
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