A Late-time Radio Search for Highly Off-axis Jets from PTF Broad-lined Ic Supernovae in GRB-like Host Galaxy Environments
Genevieve Schroeder (Cornell), Anna Y. Q. Ho, Ranadeep G. Dastidar, Maryam Modjaz, Alessandra Corsi, and Paul C. Duffell

TL;DR
This study uses late-time radio observations of 14 SNe Ic-bl to search for off-axis jets similar to those in GRBs, finding one candidate and setting limits on jet energies in non-detections, highlighting the importance of radio surveys.
Contribution
It provides the deepest radio limits to date on off-axis jets in SNe Ic-bl and demonstrates how future radio surveys can constrain jet orientations and energies.
Findings
One SN shows evidence of an off-axis jet with GRB-like energy.
Deep radio limits exclude off-axis jets with energies above 10^{51} erg in certain environments.
Future radio monitoring can detect highly off-axis jets up to 90° off-axis.
Abstract
Hydrogen/Helium-poor stripped-envelope core-collapse supernovae with broad lines (SNe Ic-bl) almost always accompany the nearby () jetted relativistic explosions known as long duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). However, the majority of SNe Ic-bl have no detected GRB counterpart. At least some of these SNe should harbor off-axis jets, whose afterglow may become detectable at late times, particularly at radio wavelengths. Here, we present Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array radio observations (rest frame times of - days post SN discovery) of a sample of 14 SNe Ic-bl discovered by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) that have been demonstrated to originate from the same host environments as the SNe Ic-bl associated with nearby GRBs. Of the 14 SNe, we identify three that are radio detected, one of which (PTF10tqv, ) is consistent with an off-axis jet…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
