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Abstract Using optical and near-infrared images of the Cassiopeia A (Cas A) supernova remnant covering the time period 1951–2022, together with optical spectra of selected filaments, we present an investigation of Cas A’s reverse shock velocity and the effects it has on the remnant’s metal-rich ejecta. We find the sequence of optical ejecta brightening and the appearance of new optical ejecta indicating the advancement of the remnant’s reverse shock in the remnant’s main shell has velocities typically between 1000 and 2000 km s−1, which is ∼1000 km s−1less than recent measurements made in X-rays. We further find that the reverse shock appears to move much more slowly and is nearly even stationary in the sky frame along the remnant’s western limb. However, we do not find the reverse shock to move inward at velocities as large as ∼2000 km s−1as has been reported. Optical ejecta in Cas A’s main emission shell have proper motions indicating outward tangential motions ≃3500–6000 km s−1, with the smaller values preferentially along the remnant’s southern regions, which we speculate may be partially the cause of the remnant’s faint and more slowly evolving southern sections. Following interaction with the reverse shock, ejecta knots exhibit extended mass ablated trails – in length, leading to extended emission indicating reverse shock induced decelerated velocities as large as ≃1000 km s−1. Such ablated material is most prominently seen in higher ionization line emissions, whereas denser parts of ejecta knots show surprisingly little deceleration.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 29, 2026
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Abstract We present the results from our extensive hard-to-soft X-ray (NuSTAR, Swift-XRT, XMM-Newton, Chandra) and meter-to-millimeter-wave radio (Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, Very Large Array, NOEMA) monitoring campaign of the very nearby (d = 6.9 Mpc) Type II supernova (SN) 2023ixf spanning ≈4–165 days post-explosion. This unprecedented data set enables inferences on the explosion’s circumstellar medium (CSM) density and geometry. In particular, we find that the luminous X-ray emission is well modeled by thermal free–free radiation from the forward shock with rapidly decreasing photoelectric absorption with time. The radio spectrum is dominated by synchrotron radiation from the same shock. Similar to the X-rays, the level of free–free absorption affecting the radio spectrum rapidly decreases with time as a consequence of the shock propagation into the dense CSM. While the X-ray and the radio modeling independently support the presence of a dense medium corresponding to an effective mass-loss rate atR = (0.4–14) × 1015cm (forvw = 25 km s−1), our study points at a complex CSM density structure with asymmetries and clumps. The inferred densities are ≈10–100 times those of typical red supergiants, indicating an extreme mass-loss phase of the progenitor in the ≈200 yr preceding core collapse, which leads to the most X-ray luminous Type II SN and the one with the most delayed emergence of radio emission. These results add to the picture of the complex mass-loss history of massive stars on the verge of collapse and demonstrate the need for panchromatic campaigns to fully map their intricate environments.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 14, 2026
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ABSTRACT We present multiwavelength observations of supernova (SN) 2017hcc with the Chandra X-ray telescope and the X-ray telescope onboard Swift (Swift-XRT) in X-ray bands, with the Spitzer and the TripleSpec spectrometer in near-infrared (IR) and mid-IR bands and with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) for radio bands. The X-ray observations cover a period of 29 to 1310 d, with the first X-ray detection on day 727 with the Chandra. The SN was subsequently detected in the VLA radio bands from day 1000 onwards. While the radio data are sparse, synchrotron-self absorption is clearly ruled out as the radio absorption mechanism. The near- and the mid-IR observations showed that late time IR emission dominates the spectral energy distribution. The early properties of SN 2017hcc are consistent with shock breakout into a dense mass-loss region, with $$\dot{M} \sim 0.1$$ M⊙ yr−1 for a decade. At few 100 d, the mass-loss rate declined to ∼0.02 M⊙ yr−1, as determined from the dominant IR luminosity. In addition, radio data also allowed us to calculate a mass-loss rate at around day 1000, which is two orders of magnitude smaller than the mass-loss rate estimates around the bolometric peak. These values indicate that the SN progenitor underwent an enhanced mass-loss event a decade before the explosion. The high ratio of IR to X-ray luminosity is not expected in simple models and is possible evidence for an asymmetric circumstellar region.more » « less
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