A Panchromatic View of Late-time Shock Power in the Type II Supernova 2023ixf
W. V. Jacobson-Gal\'an, L. Dessart, C. D. Kilpatrick, P. J. Patel, K. Auchettl, S. Tinyanont, R. Margutti, V. V. Dwarkadas, K. A. Bostroem, R. Chornock, R. J. Foley, H. Abunemeh, T. Ahumada, P. Arunachalam, M. J. Bustamante-Rosell, D. A. Coulter, C. Gall, H. Gao, X. Guo

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of supernova 2023ixf over two years, revealing shock-powered emission and dust effects that inform models of supernova evolution and circumstellar interaction.
Contribution
It combines extensive multi-wavelength observations with spectral modeling to quantify shock-powered emission and dust properties in a Type II supernova at late times, a novel integrated approach.
Findings
Shock-powered emission dominates after 500 days.
Progenitor had a mass-loss rate of ~10^{-4} M_sun/yr.
Models with specific shock powers and dust masses reproduce observed spectra.
Abstract
We present multi-wavelength observations of the type II supernova (SN II) 2023ixf during its first two years of evolution. We combine ground-based optical/NIR spectroscopy with Hubble Space Telescope (HST) far- and near-ultraviolet spectroscopy and James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) near- and mid-infrared photometry and spectroscopy to create spectral energy distributions of SN 2023ixf at +374 and +620 days post-explosion, covering a wavelength range of ~0.1-30 m. The multi-band light curve of SN 2023ixf follows a standard radioactive decay decline rate after the plateau until ~500 days, at which point shock powered emission from ongoing interaction between the SN ejecta and circumstellar material (CSM) begins to dominate. This evolution is temporally consistent with 0.3-10 keV X-ray detections of SN 2023ixf and broad ''boxy'' spectral line emission from reprocessing of shock…
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