Evidence for bipolar explosions in Type IIP supernovae
T. Nagao, K. Maeda, S. Mattila, H. Kuncarayakti, M. Kawabata, K., Taguchi, T. Nakaoka, A. Cikota, M. Bulla, S. Vasylyev, C. P. Gutierrez, M., Yamanaka, K. Isogai, K. Uno, M. Ogawa, S. Inutsuka, M. Tsurumi, R. Imazawa,, K.S. Kawabata

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that some Type IIP supernovae, including SN 2021yja, undergo bipolar explosions with distinct polar and equatorial ejecta components, revealed through polarization and spectral analysis.
Contribution
It presents detailed polarization and spectral observations of SN 2021yja, demonstrating bipolar explosion geometries in Type IIP supernovae for the first time.
Findings
High continuum polarization indicates aspherical explosion geometry.
Bipolar explosion model explains polarization angle behavior.
Spectral line evolution supports bipolar ejecta structure.
Abstract
Recent observations of core-collapse supernovae (SNe) suggest aspherical explosions. Globally aspherical structures in SN explosions are regarded as the key for understanding their explosion mechanism. However, the exact explosion geometries from the inner cores to the outer envelopes are poorly understood. Here, we present photometric, spectroscopic and polarimetric observations of the Type IIP SN 2021yja and discuss its explosion geometry, in comparison to those of other Type IIP SNe that show large-scale aspherical structures in their hydrogen envelopes (SNe 2012aw, 2013ej and 2017gmr). During the plateau phase, SNe 2012aw and 2021yja exhibit high continuum polarization characterized by two components with perpendicular polarization angles. This behavior can be interpreted to be due to a bipolar explosion, composed of a polar (energetic) and an equatorial (bulk) components of the SN…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Neutrino Physics Research · Nuclear Physics and Applications
