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Shock cooling of a red-supergiant supernova at redshift 3 in lensed images

Authors :
Space Telescope Science Institute (US)
University of Arizona
Smithsonian Institution
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US)
W. M. Keck Foundation
National Science Foundation (US)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Japan)
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
Ministry of Science, Technology and Space (Israel)
Berkeley Center for Cosmological Physics
European Commission
Chen, Wenlei
Kelly, Patrick L.
Oguri, Masamune
Broadhurst, Tom
Diego, José María
Emami, Najmeh
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Treu, Tommaso
Zitrin, Adi
Space Telescope Science Institute (US)
University of Arizona
Smithsonian Institution
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (US)
W. M. Keck Foundation
National Science Foundation (US)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Japan)
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
Ministry of Science, Technology and Space (Israel)
Berkeley Center for Cosmological Physics
European Commission
Chen, Wenlei
Kelly, Patrick L.
Oguri, Masamune
Broadhurst, Tom
Diego, José María
Emami, Najmeh
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Treu, Tommaso
Zitrin, Adi
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The core-collapse supernova of a massive star rapidly brightens when a shock, produced following the collapse of its core, reaches the stellar surface. As the shock-heated star subsequently expands and cools, its early-time light curve should have a simple dependence on the size of the progenitor1 and therefore final evolutionary state. Measurements of the radius of the progenitor from early light curves exist for only a small sample of nearby supernovae2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14, and almost all lack constraining ultraviolet observations within a day of explosion. The several-day time delays and magnifying ability of galaxy-scale gravitational lenses, however, should provide a powerful tool for measuring the early light curves of distant supernovae, and thereby studying massive stellar populations at high redshift. Here we analyse individual rest-frame exposures in the ultraviolet to the optical taken with the Hubble Space Telescope, which simultaneously capture, in three separate gravitationally lensed images, the early phases of a supernova at redshift z ≈ 3 beginning within 5.8 ± 3.1 hours of explosion. The supernova, seen at a lookback time of approximately 11.5 billion years, is strongly lensed by an early-type galaxy in the Abell 370 cluster. We constrain the pre-explosion radius to be 533+154−119 solar radii, consistent with a red supergiant. Highly confined and massive circumstellar material at the same radius can also reproduce the light curve, but because no similar low-redshift examples are known, this is unlikely.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380453539
Document Type :
Electronic Resource