Nebular Phase Evolution of SN 2023ixf (I): From Circumstellar Infrared Echo to the onset of in-situ Dust Formation in a Type II Supernova
Avinash Singh, S. Goto, A. Sarangi, J. Johansson, C. Fransson, S. Barmentloo, J. Sollerman, R. S. Teja, K. Maeda, T. Hamada, N. Sarin, M. Yamanaka, T. Nakaoka, K. S. Kawabata, S. Schulze, A. Jerkstrand, S. Rose, D. K. Sahu, A. Gangopadhyay, G. C. Anupama, T. Ahumada, S. Anand

TL;DR
This paper presents comprehensive optical, infrared, and JWST observations of SN 2023ixf, revealing early circumstellar echoes and the onset of internal dust formation, providing key insights into dust evolution in Type II supernovae.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed time-resolved analysis linking early circumstellar echoes to in-situ dust formation in a Type II supernova.
Findings
Early infrared excess consistent with circumstellar echo.
Detection of CO emission indicating molecule formation.
Evidence of internal dust mass growth over time.
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared (NIR) photometric and spectroscopic observations of the Type II supernova SN 2023ixf spanning 150 to 750 days, combined with published early-time optical and infrared photometry, and JWST NIRSpec and MIRI spectroscopy, to disentangle circumstellar echo emission from newly formed internal dust. The combined dataset reveals an early infrared excess by 1.8 days, a broad secondary NIR rebrightening over about 89 to 175 days, progressive attenuation of the red wing of H-alpha from about 132 days, and CO emission detected by about 217 days. We identify the onset of H-alpha asymmetry as the first direct signature for internal dust formation, and modeling of the H-alpha profile over 140 to 418 days yields an internal silicate-equivalent dust mass of about 1.5e-6 to 6e-5 solar masses. By contrast, the early infrared evolution is best interpreted as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Neutrino Physics Research
