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Published November 10, 2006 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Radio and X-Ray Luminous SN 2003bg and the Circumstellar Density Variations around Radio Supernovae

Abstract

We report extensive radio and X-ray observations of SN 2003bg, whose spectroscopic evolution shows a transition from a broad-lined Type Ic to a hydrogen-rich Type II, and later to a typical hydrogen-poor Type Ibc. We show that the extraordinarily luminous radio emission is well described by a self-absorption-dominated synchrotron spectrum, while the observed X-ray emission at t ≈ 30 days is adequately fit by inverse Compton scattering of the optical photons off of the synchrotron-emitting electrons. Our radio model implies a subrelativistic ejecta velocity, ν(overbar) ≈ 0.24c, at t_0 ≈ 10 days after the explosion, which emphasizes that broad optical absorption lines do not imply relativistic ejecta. We find that the total energy of the radio-emitting region evolves as E ≈ 7.3 × 10^(48)(t/t_0)^(0.4) ergs, assuming equipartition of energy between relativistic electrons and magnetic fields (ε_e = ε_B = 0.1). The circumstellar density is well described by a stellar wind profile, with modest (factor of ~2) episodic density enhancements that produce abrupt achromatic flux variations. We estimate an average mass-loss rate of M ≈ 3 × 10^(-4) M_☉ yr^(-1) (assuming a wind velocity of ν_w = 10^3 km s^(-1)) for the progenitor, consistent with the observed values for Galactic Wolf-Rayet stars. Comparison with other events reveals that ~50% of radio supernovae show similar short-timescale flux variations, attributable to circumstellar density irregularities. Specifically, the radio light curves of SN 2003bg are strikingly similar to those of the Type IIb SN 2001ig, suggestive of a common progenitor evolution for these two events. Based on the relative intensity of the inferred density enhancements, we conclude that the progenitors of SNe 2003bg and 2001ig experienced quasi-periodic mass-loss episodes just prior to the SN explosion. Finally, this study emphasizes that abrupt radio light-curve variations cannot be used as a reliable proxy for an engine-driven explosion, including off-axis gamma-ray bursts.

Additional Information

© 2006 American Astronomical Society. Received 2005 December 15; accepted 2006 July 8. We are indebted to Barry Clark for his generous scheduling of the VLA for this project. We thank M. Hamuy and A. Filippenko for making their optical SN 2003bg data available to us during this study. The authors thank Re'em Sari, Doug Leonard, Edo Berger, Michael Rupen, Paolo Mazzali, Avishay Gal-Yam, P. Brian Cameron, Derek Fox, Ehud Nakar, and Kurt Weiler for useful discussions. Caltech SN research is supported by NSF and NASA grants. A. M. S. acknowledges support by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory Graduate Summer Student Research Assistantship program and the NASA Graduate Student Research Program. R. A. C. acknowledges NSF grant AST-0307366.

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August 22, 2023
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