SN 1986J VLBI: II. The Evolution of the Shell and the Central Source
M. F. Bietenholz, N. Bartel, M. P. Rupen

TL;DR
This study presents VLBI observations of supernova 1986J over 22-25 years, revealing the shell's expansion, a central bright spot likely linked to a compact remnant, and spectral evolution indicating complex interactions with the circumstellar medium.
Contribution
First detailed VLBI imaging over 25 years of SN1986J, showing the evolution of the shell and the central source, and proposing new interpretations for the central bright spot.
Findings
Shell expands with t^(0.69+-0.03)
Central bright spot is still brightening and may be a black-hole or neutron-star remnant
Spectral features suggest complex shock and circumstellar interactions
Abstract
We present new VLBI images of supernova 1986J, taken at 5, 8.4 and 22 GHz between t=22 to 25 yr after the explosion. The shell expands as t^(0.69+-0.03). We estimate the progenitor's mass-loss rate at (4 ~ 10) * 10^-5 Msol/yr (for v_w = 10 km/s). Two bright spots are seen in the images. The first, in the northeast, is now fading. The second, very near the center of the projected shell and unique to SN1986J, is still brightening relative to the shell, and now dominates the VLBI images. It is marginally resolved at 22 GHz (diameter ~0.3 mas; ~5 * 10^16 cm at 10 Mpc). The integrated VLA spectrum of SN1986J shows an inversion point and a high-frequency turnover, both progressing downward in frequency and due to the central bright spot. The optically-thin spectral index of the central bright spot is indistinguishable from that of the shell. The small proper motion of 1500+-1500 km/s of the…
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