Luminous Radio Emission from the Superluminous Supernova 2017ens at 3.3 years after explosion
Raffaella Margutti, J. S. Bright, D. J. Matthews, D. L. Coppejans, K., D. Alexander, E. Berger, M. Bietenholz, R. Chornock, L. DeMarchi, M. R., Drout, T. Eftekhari, W. V. Jacobson-Galan, T. Laskar, D. Milisavljevic, K., Murase, M. Nicholl, C. M. B. Omand, M. Stroh, G. Terreran

TL;DR
This paper reports the first radio detection of superluminous supernova 2017ens at 3.3 years post-explosion, revealing insights into its circumstellar environment and progenitor star's mass-loss history.
Contribution
It provides the earliest radio detection of a superluminous supernova and interprets the data to infer properties of the circumstellar medium and progenitor star.
Findings
Radio detection at 1250 days post-explosion.
Inferred mass-loss rate of ~10^{-4} solar masses per year.
Circumstellar mass up to 0.5 solar masses.
Abstract
We present the results from a multi-year radio campaign of the superluminous supernova (SLSN) 2017ens, which yielded the earliest radio detection of a SLSN to date at the age of 3.3 years after explosion. SN2017ens was not detected at radio frequencies in the first 300\,d of evolution but reached at GHz, days post-explosion. Interpreting the radio observations in the context of synchrotron radiation from the supernova shock interaction with the circumstellar medium (CSM), we infer an effective mass-loss rate of at cm from the explosion's site, for a wind speed of measured from optical spectra. These findings are consistent with the spectroscopic metamorphosis of SN2017ens from hydrogen-poor to hydrogen-rich …
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
