SN 2022jli: a type Ic supernova with periodic modulation of its light curve and an unusually long rise
Moore T., Smartt S.J., Nicholl M., Srivastav S., Stevance H.F., Jess, D.B., Grant S.D.T., Fulton M.D., Rhodes L., Sim S.A., Hirai R., Podsiadlowski, P., Anderson J.P., Ashall C., Bate W., Fender R., Gutierrez C.P., Howell, D.A., Huber M.E., Inserra C., Leloudas G., Monard L.A.G.

TL;DR
SN 2022jli, a Type Ic supernova, exhibits unprecedented periodic light curve modulations and a long rise time, challenging existing models and suggesting complex ejecta interactions or binary system effects.
Contribution
This study reports the first detection of repeated periodic oscillations in a supernova light curve, revealing new insights into supernova ejecta behavior and circumstellar interactions.
Findings
First detection of periodic oscillations in a supernova light curve
Supernova exhibits a long rise time of over 59 days
Early excess emission possibly caused by ejecta-companion interaction
Abstract
We present multi-wavelength photometry and spectroscopy of SN 2022jli, an unprecedented Type Ic supernova discovered in the galaxy NGC 157 at a distance of 23 Mpc. The multi-band light curves reveal many remarkable characteristics. Peaking at a magnitude of , the high-cadence photometry reveals 12.5day periodic undulations superimposed on the 200 day supernova decline. This periodicity is observed in the light curves from nine separate filter and instrument configurations with peak-to-peak amplitudes of 0.1 mag. This is the first time that repeated periodic oscillations, over many cycles, have been detected in a supernova light curve. SN 2022jli also displays an extreme early excess which fades over 25 days followed by a rise to a peak luminosity of erg s. Although the exact explosion epoch is not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
