e-MERLIN and VLBI observations of the luminous infrared galaxy IC883: a nuclear starburst and an AGN candidate revealed
C. Romero-Canizales, M. A. Perez-Torres, A. Alberdi, M. K. Argo, R. J., Beswick, E. Kankare, F. Batejat, A. Efstathiou, S. Mattila, J. E. Conway, S., T. Garrington, T. W. B. Muxlow, S. D. Ryder, P. Vaisanen

TL;DR
This study uses radio interferometry to investigate the nuclear regions of the luminous infrared galaxy IC883, revealing a likely AGN and ongoing supernova activity, and refining the classification of a recent supernova.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution radio observations of IC883, identifying a nuclear AGN candidate and confirming ongoing supernova activity, with improved supernova classification and rate estimation.
Findings
Detection of a nuclear AGN candidate in IC883.
Identification of ongoing supernova activity in the nucleus.
Refined classification of SN2011hi as a Type IIP supernova.
Abstract
The high star formation rates of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) make them ideal places for core-collapse supernova (CCSN) searches. At radio frequencies, free from dust extinction, it is possible to detect compact components within the innermost LIRG nuclear regions, such as SNe and SN remnants, as well as AGN buried deep in the LIRG nuclei. We studied the LIRG IC883 aiming at: (i) investigating its (circum-)nuclear regions using the e-EVN at 5GHz, and e-MERLIN at 6.9GHz, complemented by archival VLBI data; (ii) detecting at radio frequencies the two recently reported circumnuclear SNe 2010cu and 2011hi, which were discovered by near-IR (NIR) adaptive optics observations of IC883; and (iii) further investigating the nature of SN2011hi at NIR by means of observations with Gemini-North. The circumnuclear regions traced by e-MERLIN at 6.9GHz have an extension of ~1kpc, and show a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
