NVSS J073724+653628 , the SIMBAD biblio

2020ApJ...896L..33X - Astrophys. J., 896, L33-L33 (2020/June-3)

A serendipitous discovery of GeV gamma-ray emission from Supernova 2004dj in a survey of nearby star-forming galaxies with Fermi-LAT.

XI S.-Q., LIU R.-Y., WANG X.-Y., YANG R.-Z., YUAN Q. and ZHANG B.

Abstract (from CDS):

The interaction between a supernova ejecta and the circumstellar medium drives a strong shock wave that accelerates particles (i.e., electrons and protons). The radio and X-ray emission observed after the supernova explosion can be interpreted as synchrotron emission from accelerated electrons. The accelerated protons are expected to produce GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission via proton-proton collisions, but the flux is usually low since only a small fraction of the supernova kinetic energy is converted into the shock energy at the very early time. The low gamma-ray flux of the nearest supernova explosion, SN 1987A, agrees with this picture. Here we report a serendipitous discovery of a fading GeV gamma-ray source in spatial coincidence with one of the nearest and brightest supernova-SN 2004dj from our gamma-ray survey of nearby star-forming galaxies with Fermi-LAT. The total gamma-ray energy released by SN 2004dj is about 6 x 1047 erg. We interpret this gamma-ray emission arising from the supernova ejecta interacting with a surrounding high-density shell, which decelerates the ejecta and converts ∼1% of the SN kinetic energy to relativistic protons.

Abstract Copyright: © 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Gamma-ray sources - Type II supernovae - Non-thermal radiation sources

Simbad objects: 27

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