The Bright Supernova 1996cr in the Circinus Galaxy Imaged with VLBI: Shell Structure with Complex Evolution
Michael F. Bietenholz, Norbert Bartel, Vikram V. Dwarkadas, Leon, Mtshweni, Carlos Orquera-Rojas, Simon Ellingsen, Shinji Horiuchi, and, Anastasios Tzioumis

TL;DR
This study presents detailed radio observations of supernova 1996cr, revealing its shell structure, complex evolution, and deceleration, providing insights into its expansion dynamics and circumstellar environment.
Contribution
First high-resolution VLBI imaging of SN 1996cr showing shell morphology and complex velocity structure, combined with broadband radio measurements to analyze its evolution.
Findings
Radio spectrum follows a power-law with spectral steepening at high frequencies.
Supernova expansion velocity estimated at ~4650 km/s with evidence of deceleration.
Shell structure shows deviations suggesting a ring or equatorial belt rather than a perfect sphere.
Abstract
We present broadband radio flux-density measurements supernova (SN) 1996cr, made with MeerKAT, ATCA and ALMA, and images made from very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations with the Australian Long Baseline Array. The spectral energy distribution of SN 1996cr in 2020, at age, 8700 d, is a power-law, with flux density, between 1 and 34 GHz, but may steepen at GHz. The spectrum has flattened since d (2010). Also since d, the flux density has declined rapidly, with . The VLBI image at d shows an approximately circular structure, with a central minimum reminiscent of an optically-thin spherical shell of emission. For a distance of 3.7 Mpc, the average outer radius of the radio emission at d was cm, and SN 1996cr has been…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
