The Radio Luminosity-Risetime Function of Core-Collapse Supernovae
Michael F. Bietenholz, N. Bartel, M. Argo, R. Dua, S. Ryder, A., Soderberg

TL;DR
This study compiles and analyzes radio observations of 294 supernovae to characterize their peak luminosities and rise times, revealing differences among types and estimating progenitor mass-loss rates.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive statistical characterization of radio lightcurves and progenitor mass-loss rates across multiple supernova types.
Findings
Detected 31% of supernovae in the sample.
Type IIn supernovae have higher peak luminosities and longer rise times.
Estimated progenitor mass-loss rates vary significantly among types.
Abstract
We assemble a large set of 2-10 GHz radio flux density measurements and upper limits of 294 different supernovae (SNe), from the literature and our own and archival data. Only 31% of the SNe were detected. We characterize the SN lightcurves near the peak using a two-parameter model, with being the time to rise to a peak and the spectral luminosity at that peak. Over all SNe in our sample at Mpc, we find that d, and that erg s Hz, and therefore that generally, 50% of SNe will have erg s Hz. These values are ~30 times lower than those for only detected SNe. Types I b/c and II (excluding IIn's) have similar mean values of but the former have a wider range, whereas Type IIn SNe have ~10 times higher values with $L_{\rm…
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