The authors investigate whether the early emission phase observed as "bumps" in the light curves of some superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) can be powered by a collimated jet from the same central engine responsible for the bulk of the SLSN emission at later times.
Using 3D relativistic hydrodynamic simulations, the authors find that a jet with properties (luminosity Lj ≈ 10^45.5 erg/s, duration teng ≈ 10 days) compatible with those needed to power SLSNe can successfully break through the expanding supernova ejecta. The interaction of the jet and its shocked cocoon with the ejecta near the breakout radius generates bright ultraviolet/optical emission lasting for about a week, reaching a peak luminosity ≳ 10^44 erg/s.
The luminosity and temperature of this cocoon emission match those observed in the early bumps of SLSN light curves, weeks prior to the optical maximum. The authors suggest that confirmation of jet breakout signatures, such as days-long internal X-ray emission, large photosphere velocities (v/c ≳ 0.1), or radio afterglow detection, would provide strong evidence for central engines powering SLSNe.
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