1. Magnetar-driven Shock Breakout Revisited and Implications for Double-peaked Type I Superluminous Supernovae.
- Author
-
Liu, Liang-Duan, Gao, He, Wang, Xiao-Feng, and Yang, Sheng
- Subjects
- *
TYPE I supernovae , *MAGNETARS , *LIGHT curves , *KINETIC energy , *SUPERNOVAE - Abstract
The discovery of early bumps in some type-I superluminous supernovae (SLSNe-I) before the main peaks offers an important clue to their energy source mechanisms. In this paper, we updated an analytic magnetar-powered model for fitting the multiband light curves of double-peaked SLSNe-I. The early bump is powered by magnetar-driven shock-breakout thermal emission, and the main peak is powered by a radiative diffusion through the supernova (SN) ejecta as in the standard magnetar-powered model. Generally, the diffusive luminosity is greater than the shock-breakout luminosity at the early time, which usually makes the shock-breakout bumps unclear to observe. To obtain a clear double-peaked light curve, inefficient magnetar heating at early times is required. This model is applied to three well-observed double-peaked SLSNe-I (i.e., SN2006oz, LSQ14bdq, and DES14Xtaz). We find that a relatively massive SN ejecta with Mej ≃ 10.2–18.1M⊙ and relatively large kinetic energy of SN ejecta erg are required, and the thermalization efficiency of the magnetar heating is suppressed before tdelay, which is in the range of ≃15–43 days. The model can reproduce the observed light curves well, with a reasonable and similar set of physical parameters for both the early bump and the main peak, strengthening support for the magnetar-powered model. In the future, modeling of the double-peaked SLSNe-I will become more feasible as more events are discovered before the early bump. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF