Ionization Break-Out from Millisecond Pulsar Wind Nebulae: an X-ray Probe of the Origin of Superluminous Supernovae
Brian D. Metzger, Indrek Vurm, Romain Hascoet, Andrei M. Beloborodov

TL;DR
This paper proposes that X-ray ionization break-out from a pulsar wind nebula can serve as a direct test for the engine-powered model of superluminous supernovae, explaining observed X-ray emissions and their variability.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of ionization break-out as a novel observational signature to distinguish engine-powered supernovae from other models.
Findings
Ionization break-out can produce detectable X-ray emission within months after explosion.
Low ejecta mass and specific spin-down timescales favor X-ray break-out detection.
Asymmetry in ejecta increases likelihood of early break-out along certain directions.
Abstract
Magnetic spin-down of a millisecond neutron star has been proposed as the power source of hydrogen-poor "superluminous" supernovae (SLSNe-I). However, producing an unambiguous test that can distinguish this model from alternatives, such as circumstellar interaction, has proven challenging. After the supernova explosion, the pulsar wind inflates a hot cavity behind the expanding stellar ejecta: the nascent millisecond pulsar wind nebula. Electron/positron pairs injected by the wind cool through inverse Compton scattering and synchrotron emission, producing a pair cascade and hard X-ray spectrum inside the nebula. These X-rays ionize the inner exposed side of the ejecta, driving an ionization front that propagates outwards with time. Under some conditions this front can breach the ejecta surface within months after the optical supernova peak, allowing ~0.1-1 keV photons to escape the…
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