The delay of shock breakout due to circumstellar material evident in most type II supernovae

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • F. Förster
  • T. J. Moriya
  • J. C. Maureira
  • J. P. Anderson
  • S. Blinnikov
  • F. Bufano
  • G. Cabrera-Vives
  • A. Clocchiatti
  • T. Jaeger
  • P. A. Estévez
  • L. Galbany
  • S. González-Gaitán
  • G. Gräfener
  • M. Hamuy
  • E. Y. Hsiao
  • P. Huentelemu
  • P. Huijse
  • H. Kuncarayakti
  • J. Martínez
  • G. Medina
  • And 18 others
  • F. Olivares E.
  • G. Pignata
  • A. Razza
  • I. Reyes
  • J. San Martín
  • R. C. Smith
  • E. Vera
  • A. K. Vivas
  • A. de Ugarte Postigo
  • S. C. Yoon
  • C. Ashall
  • M. Fraser
  • A. Gal-Yam
  • E. Kankare
  • L. Le Guillou
  • P. A. Mazzali
  • N. A. Walton
  • D. R. Young

Type II supernovae (SNe II) originate from the explosion of hydrogen-rich supergiant massive stars. Their first electromagnetic signature is the shock breakout (SBO), a short-lived phenomenon that can last for hours to days depending on the density at shock emergence. We present 26 rising optical light curves of SN II candidates discovered shortly after explosion by the High Cadence Transient Survey and derive physical parameters based on hydrodynamical models using a Bayesian approach. We observe a steep rise of a few days in 24 out of 26 SN II candidates, indicating the systematic detection of SBOs in a dense circumstellar matter consistent with a mass loss rate of Ṁ> 10−4M yr−1 or a dense atmosphere. This implies that the characteristic hour-timescale signature of stellar envelope SBOs may be rare in nature and could be delayed into longer-lived circumstellar material SBOs in most SNe II.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature Astronomy
Volume2
Issue number10
Pages (from-to)808-818
ISSN2397-3366
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2018

Bibliographical note

Correction: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-018-0641-7

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