Discovery of a gravitationally lensed Type II supernova at z=1.37 with magnification ≳100×, confirmed via multi-telescope spectra and imaging.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
representative citing papers
XSNAP provides a unified pipeline for X-ray supernova analysis and derives a progenitor mass-loss rate of (6.2±0.2)×10^{-5} solar masses per year for SN 2024ggi assuming a 20 km/s wind.
The authors derive and calibrate analytical criteria, using a hydrogen-oxygen toy model and Cloudy simulations, that classify X-ray absorption states in photoionized gas across Thomson-thin and moderate-thick regimes, including scattering and boundary effects.
Morphological similarity between JWST images of planetary nebula PMR 1 and X-ray images of CCSN remnant RCW 103 indicates that two pairs of jets shaped RCW 103, supporting the jittering-jets explosion mechanism.
citing papers explorer
-
A Natural $\gtrsim 100\times$ Telescope: Discovery of the Strongly Lensed Type II SN 2025mkn at $z=1.37$
Discovery of a gravitationally lensed Type II supernova at z=1.37 with magnification ≳100×, confirmed via multi-telescope spectra and imaging.
-
XSNAP: An X-ray Supernova Analysis Pipeline with Application to the Type II Supernova 2024ggi
XSNAP provides a unified pipeline for X-ray supernova analysis and derives a progenitor mass-loss rate of (6.2±0.2)×10^{-5} solar masses per year for SN 2024ggi assuming a 20 km/s wind.
-
X-ray Transmission Through Photoionized Gas with Moderate Thomson Optical Depth
The authors derive and calibrate analytical criteria, using a hydrogen-oxygen toy model and Cloudy simulations, that classify X-ray absorption states in photoionized gas across Thomson-thin and moderate-thick regimes, including scattering and boundary effects.
-
JWST observations of a planetary nebula support jet-driven explosion of core-collapse supernova remnant RCW 103
Morphological similarity between JWST images of planetary nebula PMR 1 and X-ray images of CCSN remnant RCW 103 indicates that two pairs of jets shaped RCW 103, supporting the jittering-jets explosion mechanism.