Superluminous X-rays from a superluminous supernova
A.J. Levan (Warwick), A.M. Read (Leicester), B.D. Metzger (Columbia),, P.J. Wheatley (Warwick), N.R. Tanvir (Leicester)

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of extremely bright X-ray emission from a superluminous supernova, providing new insights into its explosion mechanism and challenging existing models of stellar destruction.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of superluminous supernovae with X-ray luminosities exceeding previous records, constraining their explosion mechanisms and the possible presence of central engines or relativistic jets.
Findings
Detected X-ray luminosity of ~10^45 ergs/s from a superluminous supernova.
X-ray brightness exceeds typical supernovae by three orders of magnitude.
Results suggest the presence of a central engine or relativistic jet in the explosion.
Abstract
The discovery of a population of superluminous supernovae (SLSNe), with peak luminosities a factor of ~100 brighter than normal SNe (typically SLSNe have M_V <-21), has shown an unexpected diversity in core-collapse supernova properties. Numerous models have been postulated for the nature of these events, including a strong interaction of the shockwave with a dense circumstellar environment, a re-energizing of the outflow via a central engine, or an origin in the catastrophic destruction of the star following a loss of pressure due to pair production in an extremely massive stellar core (so-called pair instability supernovae). Here we consider constraints that can be placed on the explosion mechanism of Hydrogen-poor SLSNe (SLSNe-I) via X-ray observations, with XMM-Newton, Chandra and Swift, and show that at least one SLSNe-I is likely the brightest X-ray supernovae ever observed, with…
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