Strongly decelerated expansion of SN 1979C

DOI: 
Publication date: 
01/01/2002
Main author: 
Marcaide J.M.
IAA authors: 
Alberdi A.;Lara L.
Authors: 
Marcaide J.M., Pérez-Torres M.A., Ros E., Alberdi A., Diamond P.J., Guirado J.C., Lara L., Van Dyk S.D., Weiler K.W.
Journal: 
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
384
Pages: 
408-413
Number: 
Abstract: 
We observed SN 1979C in M100 on 4 June 1999, about twenty years after explosion, with a very sensitive four-antenna VLBI array at the wavelength of λ18 cm. The distance to M100 and the expansion velocities are such that the supernova cannot be fully resolved by our Earth-wide array. Model-dependent sizes for the source have been determined and compared with previous results. We conclude that the supernova shock was initially in free expansion for 6 ± 2 yrs and then experienced a very strong deceleration. The onset of deceleration took place a few years before the abrupt trend change in the integrated radio flux density curves. We estimate the shocked swept-up mass to be Msw ∼ 1.6 M⊙, assuming a standard density profile for the CSM. Such a swept-up mass for SN 1979C suggests a mass of the hydrogen-rich envelope ejected at explosion no larger than Menv ∼ 0.9 M⊙. If SN 1979C originated in a binary star, the low value of Menv suggests that the companion of the progenitor star stripped off most of the hydrogen-rich envelope mass of the presupernova star prior to the explosion.
Database: 
SCOPUS
Keywords: 
Galaxies: individual: M100; ISM: supernova remnants; Radio continuum: stars; Supernovae: individual: SN 1979C; Techniques: interferometric