Electron cooling and the connection between expansion and flux-density evolution in radio supernovae
I. Marti-Vidal, M.A. Perez-Torres, A. Brunthaler

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electron cooling influences the relationship between expansion and flux-density evolution in radio supernovae, providing insights into magnetic field estimates and electron acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a model accounting for electron cooling effects on radio light curves, refining magnetic field and electron population estimates in supernovae.
Findings
Electron cooling significantly affects flux-density decay rates.
Magnetic fields in observed RSNe range from ~20 to >100 G.
Consistent density profile index s=2 found for several RSNe.
Abstract
Radio supernovae (RSNe) are weak and rare events. Their typical maximum radio luminosities are of the order of only \,erg\,s\,Hz. There are, however, very few cases of relatively bright (and/or close) RSNe, from which the expansion of the shock and the radio light curves at several frequencies have been monitored covering several years. Applying the standard model of radio emission from supernovae, it is possible to relate the defining parameters of the modelled expansion curve to those of the modelled light curves in a simple algebraic way, by assuming an evolution law for the magnetic field and for the energy density of the population of synchrotron-emitting electrons. However, cooling mechanisms of the electrons may affect considerably this connection between light curves and expansion curve, and lead to wrong conclusions on the details of the electron…
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