Panchromatic Observations of SN 2011dh Point to a Compact Progenitor Star
Alicia M. Soderberg, R. Margutti, B. A. Zauderer, M. Krauss, B. Katz,, L. Chomiuk, J. A. Dittmann, E. Nakar, T. Sakamoto, N. Kawai, K. Hurley, S., Barthelmy, T. Toizumi, M. Morii, R. A. Chevalier, M. Gurwell, G. Petitpas, M., Rupen, K. D. Alexander, E. M. Levesque, C. Fransson

TL;DR
This study combines multi-wavelength observations of SN 2011dh to determine it originated from a compact progenitor, contrasting with earlier suggestions of an extended star, and provides detailed shock and environment properties.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive panchromatic analysis of SN 2011dh, revealing a compact progenitor and detailed shock and circumstellar environment properties, challenging previous extended star models.
Findings
SN 2011dh's shock velocity ~0.1c
Progenitor mass loss rate ~6e-5 M_sun/yr
Progenitor radius ~1e+11 cm
Abstract
We report the discovery and detailed monitoring of X-ray emission associated with the Type IIb SN 2011dh using data from the Swift and Chandra satellites, placing it among the best studied X-ray supernovae to date. We further present millimeter and radio data obtained with the SMA, CARMA, and EVLA during the first three weeks after explosion. Combining these observations with early optical photometry, we show that the panchromatic dataset is well-described by non-thermal synchrotron emission (radio/mm) with inverse Compton scattering (X-ray) of a thermal population of optical photons. In this scenario, the shock partition fractions deviate from equipartition by a factor, (e_e/e_B) ~ 30. We derive the properties of the shockwave and the circumstellar environment and find a shock velocity, v~0.1c, and a progenitor mass loss rate of ~6e-5 M_sun/yr. These properties are consistent with the…
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