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A surge of light at the birth of a supernova

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arxiv 1802.09360 v1 pith:PWOS7C6B submitted 2018-02-22 astro-ph.HE astro-ph.SR

A surge of light at the birth of a supernova

classification astro-ph.HE astro-ph.SR
keywords supernovashockemergenceevolutionexplosionstructureaccountallowed
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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It is difficult to establish the properties of massive stars that explode as supernovae. The electromagnetic emission during the first minutes to hours after the emergence of the shock from the stellar surface conveys important information about the final evolution and structure of the exploding star. However, the unpredictable nature of supernova events hinders the detection of this brief initial phase. Here we report the serendipitous discovery of a newly born, normal type IIb supernova (SN 2016gkg), which reveals a rapid brightening at optical wavelengths of about 40 magnitudes per day. The very frequent sampling of the observations allowed us to study in detail the outermost structure of the progenitor of the supernova and the physics of the emergence of the shock. We develop hydrodynamical models of the explosion that naturally account for the complete evolution of the supernova over distinct phases regulated by different physical processes. This result suggests that it is appropriate to decouple the treatment of the shock propagation from the unknown mechanism that triggers the explosion.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

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    Population synthesis from binary evolution models predicts periodic neutron star-companion interactions in more than half of surviving hydrogen-poor core-collapse supernovae, with periods peaking at 20-50 days and las...