The Radio Signatures of the First Supernovae
Avery Meiksin (IfA, University of Edinburgh), Daniel J. Whalen, (Carnegie-Mellon University)

TL;DR
This paper predicts radio signatures of primordial supernova remnants, especially hypernovae, which could be detected with current and future radio telescopes, helping to understand early star formation and the initial mass function of Pop III stars.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed calculations of radio synchrotron signatures from Pop III supernova remnants, highlighting their detectability and potential to constrain early stellar populations.
Findings
Hypernova remnants are the brightest and detectable with existing telescopes.
Type II supernova remnants are much dimmer, requiring future telescopes like SKA.
Distinct radio spectra can differentiate supernova types and inform early universe models.
Abstract
Primordial stars are key to primeval structure formation as the first stellar components of primeval galaxies, the sources of cosmic chemical enrichment and likely cosmic reionization, and they possibly gave rise to the supermassive black holes residing at the centres of galaxies today. While the direct detection of individual Pop III stars will likely remain beyond reach for decades to come, we show their supernova remnants may soon be detectable in the radio. We calculate radio synchrotron signatures between 0.5 - 35 GHz from hydrodynamical computations of the supernova remnants of Pop III stars in minihaloes. We find that hypernovae yield the brightest systems, with observed radio fluxes as high as 1 - 10 muJy. Less energetic Type II supernovae yield remnants about a factor of 30 dimmer and pair-instability supernova remnants are dimmer by a factor of more than 10,000. Because of the…
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