论文标题
磁力的可变热能注入旋转,这是剥离的envelope Supernova浅曲线颠簸的可能原因
Variable thermal energy injection from magnetar spin down as a possible cause of stripped-envelope supernova light-curve bumps
论文作者
论文摘要
某些剥离的Envelope超新星(例如I型超小型超新星)的光度演变很难用规范的56NI核衰减加热来解释。流行的替代加热来源是快速磁化快速旋转的中子星(磁铁)的快速旋转。最近的观察结果表明,I型超新星通常具有颠簸的光曲线,具有多个光度峰。颠簸光曲线的原因尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们调查了曲线凸起是由磁性旋转的热能注入的变化引起的。我们发现,热能注入的时间增加会导致多个光度峰。发现可变的热能注入引起的多个光度峰伴随着光谱温度的显着升高,并且光时半径没有显着改变。我们表明,可以通过暂时将磁性旋转能量输入的磁力旋转能量输入为2-3天,持续5-20天,可以再现SN 2015亿和SN 2019STC的颠簸光曲线。但是,并非所有的曲线凸起都伴随着我们合成模型所预测的清晰光谱温度的升高。特别是,SN 2019STC的次生曲线颠簸伴随着光谱半径而不是温度的时间增加,这在我们的合成模型中看不到。因此,我们得出的结论是,并非所有在发光超新星中观察到的光曲线凸起都是由磁性旋转的可变热能注射引起的,并且某些凸起可能是由不同的机制引起的。
Luminosity evolution of some stripped-envelope supernovae such as Type I superluminous supernovae is difficult to be explained by the canonical 56Ni nuclear decay heating. A popular alternative heating source is rapid spin down of strongly-magnetized rapidly-rotating neutron stars (magnetars). Recent observations have indicated that Type I superluminous supernovae often have bumpy light curves with multiple luminosity peaks. The cause of bumpy light curves is unknown. In this study, we investigate the possibility that the light-curve bumps are caused by variations of the thermal energy injection from magnetar spin down. We find that a temporal increase in the thermal energy injection can lead to multiple luminosity peaks. The multiple luminosity peaks caused by the variable thermal energy injection is found to be accompanied by significant increase in photospheric temperature, and photospheric radii are not significantly changed. We show that the bumpy light curves of SN 2015bn and SN 2019stc can be reproduced by temporarily increasing magnetar spin-down energy input by a factor of 2-3 for 5-20 days. However, not all the light-curve bumps are accompanied by the clear photospheric temperature increase as predicted by our synthetic models. In particular, the secondary light-curve bump of SN 2019stc is accompanied by a temporal increase in photospheric radii rather than temperature, which is not seen in our synthetic models. We, therefore, conclude that not all the light-curve bumps observed in luminous supernovae are caused by the variable thermal energy injection from magnetar spin down and some bumps are likely caused by a different mechanism.