The 30-Year Search for the Compact Object in SN 1987A
Dennis Alp, Josefin Larsson, Claes Fransson, Remy Indebetouw, Anders, Jerkstrand, Antero Ahola, David Burrows, Peter Challis, Phil Cigan,, Aleksandar Cikota, Robert P. Kirshner, Jacco Th. van Loon, Seppo Mattila,, C.-Y. Ng, Sangwook Park, Jason Spyromilio, S. E. Woosley

TL;DR
Despite over 30 years of searches, the compact object in SN 1987A remains undetected, but new multi-wavelength limits constrain its possible properties, suggesting it may be a dust-obscured neutron star.
Contribution
This study provides the most comprehensive multi-wavelength observational limits to date on the compact object in SN 1987A, incorporating realistic ejecta absorption models.
Findings
Limits on the compact object's luminosity are approximately 0.1 mJy at 213 GHz.
The bolometric luminosity is constrained to less than 22-138 Lsun depending on dust obscuration.
The data exclude most accretion models and set upper bounds on magnetic field strength and temperature.
Abstract
Despite more than 30 years of searches, the compact object in Supernova (SN) 1987A has not yet been detected. We present new limits on the compact object in SN 1987A using millimeter, near-infrared, optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray observations from ALMA, VLT, HST, and Chandra. The limits are approximately 0.1 mJy ( erg s cm Hz) at 213 GHz, 1 Lsun ( erg s cm Hz) in optical if our line-of-sight is free of ejecta dust, and erg s ( erg s cm Hz) in 2-10 keV X-rays. Our X-ray limits are an order of magnitude less constraining than previous limits because we use a more realistic ejecta absorption model based on three-dimensional neutrino-driven SN explosion models (presented in an accompanying article). The allowed bolometric luminosity of the compact object…
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