Panning for gold, but finding helium: Discovery of the ultra-stripped supernova SN 2019wxt from gravitational-wave follow-up observations
Metadata
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EDP Sciences
Materia
Supernovae: general Supernovae: individual: SN2019wxt Binaries: general Stars: evolution Gravitational waves
Date
2023-07-20Referencia bibliográfica
Agudo, I., et al. Panning for gold, but finding helium: Discovery of the ultra-stripped supernova SN 2019wxt from gravitational-wave follow-up observations. A&A 675, A201 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202244751]
Sponsorship
Spanish MCINN: IAA-CSIC (SEV-2017-0709), AYA2016-80889-P, PID2019-107847RB-C44; MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033; European Social Funding: Ramón y Cajal Fellowship RYC2019-026465-I; Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant H2020-MSCA-IF-2018-842471; Spanish Ministry PID2020-118491GB-I00; Junta de Andalucia P20_010168; EU Horizon 2020: ERC KILONOVA No. 885281; Spanish AEI CEX2019-000920-S; ACIISI; ERDF ProID2021010074; EU Horizon 2020: 101004719; European Research Council (ERC) 725246; Spanish MCINN PID2019-105510GB-C31; María de Maeztu award CEX2019-000918-M; ERC Horizon 2020: 715051; Gobierno de Canarias; ERDF ProID2021010132; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Europa Excelencia EUR2021-122010; MICIU/FEDER, EU RTI2018-096228-B-C31; Reg. Govt. of Andalusia IAA4SKA P18-RT-3082; H2020 871158; Millennium Science Initiative - ICN12_009; CSIC-MURALES 20215AT009; European Southern Observatory 1102.D-0353, 0102.D-0348, 0102.D-0350, 1103.D-0328, 1104.A-0380; NASA NAS 5–26555, 15980; CCI International Time Programme ("GTC1-18ITP; Coordinated European follow-up of gravitational wave events"); ERDF ProID2020010104Abstract
We present the results from multi-wavelength observations of a transient discovered during an intensive follow-up campaign of S191213g, a gravitational wave (GW) event reported by the LIGO-Virgo Collaboration as a possible binary neutron star merger in a low latency search. This search yielded SN 2019wxt, a young transient in a galaxy whose sky position (in the 80% GW contour) and distance (∼150 Mpc) were plausibly compatible with the localisation uncertainty of the GW event. Initially, the transienta's tightly constrained age, its relatively faint peak magnitude (Mi ∼ -16.7 mag), and the r-band decline rate of ∼1 mag per 5 days appeared suggestive of a compact binary merger. However, SN 2019wxt spectroscopically resembled a type Ib supernova, and analysis of the optical-near-infrared evolution rapidly led to the conclusion that while it could not be associated with S191213g, it nevertheless represented an extreme outcome of stellar evolution. By modelling the light curve, we estimated an ejecta mass of only ∼0.1 M·, with 56Ni comprising ∼20% of this. We were broadly able to reproduce its spectral evolution with a composition dominated by helium and oxygen, with trace amounts of calcium. We considered various progenitor channels that could give rise to the observed properties of SN 2019wxt and concluded that an ultra-stripped origin in a binary system is the most likely explanation. Disentangling genuine electromagnetic counterparts to GW events from transients such as SN 2019wxt soon after discovery is challenging: in a bid to characterise this level of contamination, we estimated the rate of events with a volumetric rate density comparable to that of SN 2019wxt and found that around one such event per week can occur within the typical GW localisation area of O4 alerts out to a luminosity distance of 500 Mpc, beyond which it would become fainter than the typical depth of current electromagnetic follow-up campaigns.