Litcius/Paper detail

Blasts from the Past: Supernova Shock Breakouts among X-Ray Transients in the XMM-Newton Archive

Dennis Alp, Josefin Larsson

2020The Astrophysical Journal52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The first electromagnetic signal from a supernova (SN) is released when the shock crosses the progenitor surface. This shock breakout (SBO) emission provides constraints on progenitor and explosion properties. Observationally, SBOs appear as minute- to hour-long extragalactic X-ray transients. They are challenging to detect and only one SBO has been observed to date. Here, we search the XMM-Newton archive and find 12 new SN SBO candidates. We identify host galaxies to nine of these at estimated redshifts of 0.1–1. The SBO candidates have energies of ∼10 46 erg, timescales of 30–3000 s, and temperatures of 0.1–1 keV. They are all consistent with being SN SBOs, but some may be misidentified Galactic foreground sources or other extragalactic objects. SBOs from blue supergiants agree well with most of the candidates. However, a few could be SBOs from Wolf–Rayet stars surrounded by dense circumstellar media, whereas two are more naturally explained as SBOs from red supergiants. The observations tentatively support non-spherical SBOs and are in agreement with asymmetries predicted by recent three-dimensional SN explosion simulations. eROSITA may detect ∼2 SBOs per year, which could be detected in live analyses and promptly followed up.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsSupernovaAstrophysicsRedshiftGalaxyRed supergiantAstronomySupergiantStarsShock (circulatory)Near-Earth supernovaSpectrographSupernova remnantSpectral lineBreakoutShock waveJet (fluid)Emission spectrumNucleosynthesisGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeAstrophysics and Cosmic PhenomenaGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena