SN2010jp (PTF10aaxi): A Jet-Driven Type II Supernova
Nathan Smith, S. Bradley Cenko, Nat Butler, Joshua S. Bloom, Mansi M., Kasliwal, Assaf Horesh, Shrinivas R. Kulkarni, Nicholas M. Law, Peter E., Nugent, Eran O. Ofek, Dovi Poznanski, Robert M. Quimby, Branimir Sesar, Sagi, Ben-Ami, Iair Arcavi, Avishay Gal-Yam, David Polishook

TL;DR
This paper reports on SN 2010jp, a peculiar Type II supernova with a triple-peaked H-alpha line profile, suggesting a bipolar jet-driven explosion possibly linked to collapsars and black hole formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic evidence of a jet-driven explosion in a Type II supernova, with unique line profiles indicating bipolar jets and shock interaction with dense CSM.
Findings
Triple-peaked H-alpha line profile observed
Evidence supports bipolar jet-driven explosion model
Low nickel mass suggests black hole formation
Abstract
We present photometry and spectroscopy of the peculiar TypeII supernova (SN) 2010jp, also named PTF10aaxi. The light curve exhibits a linear decline with a relatively low peak absolute magnitude of only -15.9, and a low radioactive decay luminosity at late times that suggests a nickel mass below 0.003 . Spectra of SN2010jp display an unprecedented triple-peaked H line profile, showing: (1) a narrow (800 km/s) central component that suggests shock interaction with dense CSM; (2) high-velocity blue and red emission features centered at -12600 and +15400 km/s; and (3) broad wings extending from -22000 to +25000 km/s. These features persist during 100 days after explosion. We propose that this line profile indicates a bipolar jet-driven explosion, with the central component produced by normal SN ejecta and CSM interaction at mid latitudes, while the high-velocity bumps…
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