VLBI Observations of SN 2012au Reveal a Compact Radio Source a Decade Post Explosion
Mattias Lazda, Kenzie Nimmo, Maria R. Drout, Benito Marcote, Jason W.T. Hessels, Eli Wiston, Raffaella Margutti, Omar Ould-Boukattine, Tanmoy Laskar, Jacco Vink, Ryan Chornock, James K. Leung, Deanne L. Coppejans, Dan Milisavljevic, Juan Mena-Parra, Dan Patnaude

TL;DR
VLBI observations of SN 2012au a decade after explosion support a pulsar wind nebula origin for its radio emission, challenging jet-based models and offering insights into pulsar formation.
Contribution
This study provides the first VLBI evidence of a decade-old PWN in an extragalactic supernova, constraining pulsar properties and CSM interaction.
Findings
Radio source remains compact and stationary over 8-13 years.
Observations favor a PWN origin over off-axis jet models.
Initial pulsar spin-down luminosity estimated between 10^36 and 4×10^42 erg/s.
Abstract
Three leading models have been put forth to justify the observed radio re-brightening associated with stripped-envelope supernovae (SESNe) years post-explosion: radiation from an emerging pulsar wind nebula (PWN), shock interaction with a dense circumstellar medium (CSM), or emission from off-axis, relativistic jets. SN 2012au is a particularly intriguing SESN in this regard as observations obtained 6 years post-explosion have shown both (i) optical emission features consistent with a young PWN and (ii) a radio re-brightening. We present the results of our Very-Long-Baseline-Interferometric (VLBI) observations of SN 2012au performed between 8 to 13 years post core-collapse. Our VLBI observations reveal a luminous, steadily fading radio source that remains compact () and stationary () over the course of our campaign. Overall, we find…
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