Name:
Nature ms for UA.pdf
Size:
3.187Mb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Final Accepted Manuscript
Author
Li, GaiciHu, Maokai
Li, Wenxiong
Yang, Yi
Wang, Xiaofeng
Yan, Shengyu
Hu, Lei
Zhang, Jujia
Mao, Yiming
Riise, Henrik
Gao, Xing
Sun, Tianrui
Liu, Jialian
Xiong, Dingrong
Wang, Lifan
Mo, Jun
Iskandar, Abdusamatjan
Xi, Gaobo
Xiang, Danfeng
Wang, Lingzhi
Sun, Guoyou
Zhang, Keming
Chen, Jian
Lin, Weili
Guo, Fangzhou
Liu, Qichun
Cai, Guangyao
Zhou, Wenjie
Zhao, Jingyuan
Chen, Jin
Zheng, Xin
Li, Keying
Zhang, Mi
Xu, Shijun
Lyu, Xiaodong
Castro-Tirado, Alberto J
Chufarin, Vasilii
Potapov, Nikolay
Ionov, Ivan
Korotkiy, Stanislav
Nazarov, Sergey
Sokolovsky, Kirill
Hamann, Norman
Herman, Eliot
Affiliation
University of ArizonaIssue Date
2023-12-13
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
Nature ResearchCitation
Li, G., Hu, M., Li, W., Yang, Y., Wang, X., Yan, S., ... & Herman, E. (2023). A shock flash breaking out of a dusty red supergiant. Nature, 1-5.Journal
NatureRights
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2023.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Shock-breakout emission is light that arises when a shockwave, generated by the core-collapse explosion of a massive star, passes through its outer envelope. Hitherto, the earliest detection of such a signal was at several hours after the explosion1, although a few others had been reported2-7. The temporal evolution of early light curves should provide insights into the shock propagation, including explosion asymmetry and environment in the vicinity, but this has been hampered by the lack of multiwavelength observations. Here we report the instant multiband observations of a type II supernova (SN 2023ixf) in the galaxy M101 (at a distance of 6.85 ± 0.15 Mpc; ref. 8), beginning at about 1.4 h after the explosion. The exploding star was a red supergiant with a radius of about 440 solar radii. The light curves evolved rapidly, on timescales of 1-2 h, and appeared unusually fainter and redder than predicted by the models9-11 within the first few hours, which we attribute to an optically thick dust shell before it was disrupted by the shockwave. We infer that the breakout and perhaps the distribution of the surrounding dust were not spherically symmetric.Note
6 month embargo; first published 13 December 2023EISSN
1476-4687PubMed ID
38093004Version
Final accepted manuscriptae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/s41586-023-06843-6
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- The complex circumstellar environment of supernova 2023ixf.
- Authors: Zimmerman EA, Irani I, Chen P, Gal-Yam A, Schulze S, Perley DA, Sollerman J, Filippenko AV, Shenar T, Yaron O, Shahaf S, Bruch RJ, Ofek EO, De Cia A, Brink TG, Yang Y, Vasylyev SS, Ben Ami S, Aubert M, Badash A, Bloom JS, Brown PJ, De K, Dimitriadis G, Fransson C, Fremling C, Hinds K, Horesh A, Johansson JP, Kasliwal MM, Kulkarni SR, Kushnir D, Martin C, Matuzewski M, McGurk RC, Miller AA, Morag J, Neil JD, Nugent PE, Post RS, Prusinski NZ, Qin Y, Raichoor A, Riddle R, Rowe M, Rusholme B, Sfaradi I, Sjoberg KM, Soumagnac M, Stein RD, Strotjohann NL, Terwel JH, Wasserman T, Wise J, Wold A, Yan L, Zhang K
- Issue date: 2024 Mar
- Circumstellar material ejected violently by a massive star immediately before its death.
- Authors: Zhang J, Lin H, Wang X, Zhao Z, Li L, Liu J, Yan S, Xiang D, Wang H, Bai J
- Issue date: 2023 Nov 15
- Supernova shock breakout from a red supergiant.
- Authors: Schawinski K, Justham S, Wolf C, Podsiadlowski P, Sullivan M, Steenbrugge KC, Bell T, Röser HJ, Walker ES, Astier P, Balam D, Balland C, Carlberg R, Conley A, Fouchez D, Guy J, Hardin D, Hook I, Howell DA, Pain R, Perrett K, Pritchet C, Regnault N, Yi SK
- Issue date: 2008 Jul 11
- Shock cooling of a red-supergiant supernova at redshift 3 in lensed images.
- Authors: Chen W, Kelly PL, Oguri M, Broadhurst TJ, Diego JM, Emami N, Filippenko AV, Treu TL, Zitrin A
- Issue date: 2022 Nov
- The massive binary companion star to the progenitor of supernova 1993J.
- Authors: Maund JR, Smartt SJ, Kudritzki RP, Podsiadlowski P, Gilmore GF
- Issue date: 2004 Jan 8
