JWST spectroscopy of SN 2010da/NGC 300 ULX-1: a surviving star hidden by dust
Emma R. Beasor, Ryan Lau, Nathan Smith, Dominic J. Walton, Marianne Heida, Ben Davies

TL;DR
JWST observations of SN 2010da reveal a dust-enshrouded surviving star, likely an AGB star, with evidence of dust formation and binary interaction, challenging previous failed supernova interpretations.
Contribution
First infrared spectral analysis showing the donor star's return to a dust-obscured state and identifying silicon carbide dust in this unique system.
Findings
The donor star has returned to its pre-outburst appearance.
Infrared spectrum shows silicon carbide dust grains.
The system is not a failed supernova but a surviving, dust-enshrouded star.
Abstract
We present new James Webb Space Telescope () NIRSpec and MIRI integral-field spectroscopy of the remarkable system SN~2010da / NGC~300 ULX-1, the only known ultraluminous X-ray source powered by a neutron star with a supergiant donor. Our new data, taken in November 2024, reveal that the optical and near-infrared counterpart has dramatically faded since 2018 and no longer exhibits molecular absorption features characteristic of a red supergiant. Instead, the spectral energy distribution shows the donor has returned to its pre-outburst appearance, and is dominated by infrared continuum consistent with an optically thick warm (900~K) dust shell. The bolometric luminosity indicates the presence of a surviving luminous source with . Radiative transfer modelling of the mid-infrared spectral energy distribution (SED) reveals a broad emission…
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