SN2023ixf: ultraviolet-to-infrared radiative-transfer modeling of the nebular-phase evolution until 1000 days
Luc Dessart, Wynn V. Jacobson-Galan, K. Azalee Bostroem, Alexei V. Filippenko, WeiKang Zheng, Thomas G. Brink, Lluis Galbany, Claudia Gutierrez, Stefano Valenti

TL;DR
This paper models the nebular-phase evolution of supernova SN2023ixf from ultraviolet to infrared wavelengths up to 1000 days, revealing dust formation, circumstellar interaction, and spectral line effects.
Contribution
It provides detailed radiative-transfer modeling of SN2023ixf's late evolution, incorporating dust formation, circumstellar interaction, and spectral line analysis, which advances understanding of supernova nebular phases.
Findings
UV flux is powered by circumstellar interaction at all epochs.
Dust mass in ejecta may reach 1e-4Msun at 700 days.
Spectral lines show attenuation or asymmetry depending on dust location.
Abstract
We present non-local thermodynamic equilibrium radiative-transfer modeling of SN2023ixf during the nebular phase out to 1000d, using the same ejecta that matched its photospheric evolution, namely a partially stripped red-supergiant star of initially 15Msun whose terminal explosion yielded ejecta with 7-8Msun, kinetic energy of 1.2e51erg, and 56Ni mass of 0.05Msun, augmented with a cold dense shell (CDS) of 0.2Msun at 8000km/s. Interaction with circumstellar material persists at all epochs, powering the ultraviolet (UV) flux at all times, but dominating the optical only after ~600d. Matching the V-band light curve requires invoking both enhanced gamma-ray escape and dust formation after ~200d, first in the CDS and eventually in the inner ejecta as well. Depending on where they form relative to the dust, emission lines are uniformly attenuated or skewed with a blue-red asymmetry. Our…
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