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Recent VLBI Results on SN 1986J and the Possibility of FRBs Originating from Inside the Expanding Ejecta of Supernovae

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 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We discuss our VLA and VLBI observations of supernova 1986J, which is characterized by a compact radio-bright component within the expanding shell of ejecta. No other supernova (SN) has such a central component at cm wavelengths. The central component therefore provides a unique probe of the propagation of radio signals at cm wavelengths through the ejecta of a young SN. Such a probe is important in the context of Fast Radio Bursts (FRB), which, in many models, are thought to be produced by young magnetars or neutron stars. The FRB signals would therefore have to propagate through the expanding SN ejecta. Our observations of the Type II SN 1986J show that the ejecta would remain opaque to cm-wave emission like FRBs for at least several decades after the explosion, and by the time the ejecta have become transparent, the contribution of the ejecta to the dispersion measure is likely small.



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We discuss the possibility of obtaining Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) from the interior of supernovae, in particular SN 1986J. Young neutron stars are involved in many of the possible scenarios for the origin of FRBs, and it has been suggested that the high dispersion measures observed in FRBs might be produced by the ionized material in the ejecta of associated supernovae. Using VLA and VLBI measurements of the Type IIn SN 1986J, which has a central compact component not so far seen in other supernovae, we can directly observe for the first time radio signals which originate in the interior of a young (~30 yr old) supernova. We show that at age 30 yr, any FRB signal at ~1 GHz would still be largely absorbed by the ejecta. By the time the ejecta have expanded so that a 1-GHz signal would be visible, the internal dispersion measure due to the SN ejecta would be below the values typically seen for FRBs. The high dispersion measures seen for the FRBs detected so far could of course be due to propagation through the intergalactic medium provided that the FRBs are at distances much larger than that of SN 1986J, which is 10 Mpc. We conclude that if FRBs originate in Type II SNe/SNRs, they would likely not become visible till 60 ~ 200 yr after the SN explosion.
We report on VLA measurements between 1 and 45 GHz of the evolving radio spectral energy distribution (SED) of SN 1986J, made in conjunction with VLBI imaging. The SED of SN 1986J is unique among supernovae, and shows an inversion point and a high-frequency turnover. Both are due to the central component seen in the VLBI images, and both are progressing downward in frequency with time. The optically-thin spectral index of the central component is almost the same as that of the shell. We fit a simple model to the evolving SED consisting of an optically-thin shell and a partly-absorbed central component. The evolution of the SED is consistent with that of a homologously expanding system. Both components are fading, but the shell more rapidly. We conclude that the central component is physically inside the expanding shell, and not a surface hot-spot central only in projection. Our observations are consistent with the central component being due to interaction of the shock with the dense and highly-structured circumstellar medium that resulted from a period of common-envelope evolution of the progenitor. However a young pulsar-wind nebula or emission from an accreting black hole can also not be ruled out at this point.
We present a new 5-GHz global-VLBI image of supernova 1986J, observed in 2014 at $t=31.6$ yr after the explosion, and compare it to previous images to show the evolution of the supernova. Our new image has a dynamic range of ~100 and a background rms noise level of 5.9 $mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$. There is no significant linear polarization, with the image peak being $<$3% polarized. The latest image is dominated by the compact central component, whose flux density is now comparable to that of the extended supernova shell. This central component is marginally resolved with a FWHM width of $900_{-500}^{+100} ; mu$as, corresponding to a radius of $r_{rm comp}=6.7 _{-3.7}^{+0.7} times 10^{16}$ cm for a distance of 10 Mpc. Using VLBI observations between 2002 and 2014, we measured the proper motions of both the central component and a hot-spot to the NE in the shell relative to the quasar 3C66A. The central component is stationary to within the uncertainty of 12 $mu$as yr$^{-1}$, corresponding to 570 km s$^{-1}$. Our observations argue in favor of the central component being located near the physical center of SN 1986J. The shell hot-spot had a mean velocity of 2810+-750 km s$^{-1}$ to the NE, which is consistent with it taking part in the homologous expansion of the shell seen earlier. The shell emission is evolving in a non-selfsimilar fashion, with the brightest emission shifting inwards within the structure, and with only relatively faint emission being seen near the outer edge and presumed forward shock. An animation is available.
We present High Sensitivity Array (HSA) and enhanced Multi Element Remotely Linked Interferometer Network (eMERLIN) observations of the radio-loud broad-lined type Ic supernova PTF11qcj obtained $sim7.5$ years after the explosion. Previous observations of this supernova at 5.5 yrs since explosion showed a double-peaked radio light curve accompanied by a detection in the X-rays, but no evidence for broad H$alpha$ spectral features. The Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations presented here show that the PTF11qcj GHz radio ejecta remains marginally resolved at the sub-milliarcsecond level at $approx 7.5$ yrs after the explosion, pointing toward a non-relativistic expansion. Our VLBI observations thus favor a scenario in which the second peak of the PTF11qcj radio light curve is related to strong interaction of the supernova ejecta with a circumstellar medium of variable density, rather than to the emergence of an off-axis jet. Continued VLBI monitoring of PTF11qcj in the radio may strengthen further this conclusion.
We present late-time optical images and spectra of the Type IIn supernova SN 1986J. HST ACS/WFC images obtained in February 2003 show it to be still relatively bright with m(F606W) = 21.4 and m(F814W) = 20.0 mag. Compared against December 1994 HST WFPC2 images, SN 1986J shows a decline of only <1 mag in brightness over eight years. Ground-based spectra taken in 1989, 1991 and 2007 show a 50% decline in Halpha emission between 1989-1991 and an order of magnitude drop between 1991-2007, along with the disappearance of He I line emissions during the period 1991-2007. The objects [O I] 6300, 6364, [O II] 7319, 7330 and [O III] 4959, 5007 emission lines show two prominent peaks near -1000 km/s and -3500 km/s, with the more blueshifted component declining significantly in strength between 1991 and 2007. The observed spectral evolution suggests two different origins for SN 1986Js late-time optical emission: dense, shock-heated circumstellar material which gave rise to the initially bright Halpha, He I, and [N II] 5755 lines, and reverse-shock heated O-rich ejecta on the facing expanding hemisphere dominated by two large clumps generating two blueshifted emission peaks of [O I], [O II], and [O III] lines.
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