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The Kangaroo’s First Hop: The Early Fast Cooling Phase of EP250108a/SN 2025kg

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posted on 2025-09-08, 11:17 authored by RAJ Eyles-Ferris, PG Jonker, AJ Levan, DB Malesani, N Sarin, CL Fryer, JC Rastinejad, E Burns, Nial TanvirNial Tanvir, PT O’Brien, WF Fong, I Mandel, BP Gompertz, CD Kilpatrick, S Bloemen, JS Bright, F Carotenuto, G Corcoran, L Cotter, PJ Groot, L Izzo, T Laskar, A Martin-Carrillo, J Palmerio, ME Ravasio, J van Roestel, A Saccardi, Rhaana StarlingRhaana Starling, AL Thakur, SD Vergani, PM Vreeswijk, FE Bauer, S Campana, JA Chacón, AA Chrimes, S Covino, JND van Dalen, V D’Elia, M De Pasquale, N Habeeb, DH Hartmann, APC van Hoof, P Jakobsson, Y Julakanti, G Leloudas, D Mata Sánchez, CJ Nixon, DLA Pieterse, G Pugliese, J Quirola-Vásquez, BC Rayson, R Salvaterra, B Schneider, MAP Torres, T Zafar
<p dir="ltr">Fast X-ray transients are a rare and poorly understood population of events. Previously difficult to detect in real time, the launch of the Einstein Probe with its Wide-field X-ray Telescope has led to a rapid expansionof the sample and allowed the exploration of these transients across the electromagnetic spectrum. EP250108a is a recently detected example linked to an optical counterpart, SN 2025kg, or “the kangaroo.” Together with a companion Letter we present our observing campaign and analysis of this event. In this letter, we focus on the early evolution of the optical counterpart over the first 6 days, including our measurement of the redshift of <i>z</i> = 0.17641. We compare to other supernovae and fast transients showing similar features, finding significant similarities with SN 2006aj and SN 2020bvc, and show that the source is well modelled by a rapidly expanding cooling blackbody. We show the observed X-ray and radio properties are consistent with a collapsar-powered jet that is low energy (≲10<sup>51</sup> erg) and/or fails to break out of the dense material surrounding it. While we examine the possibility that the optical emission emerges from the shock produced as the supernova ejecta expand into a dense shell of circumstellar material, due to our X-ray and radio inferences, we favour a model where it arises from a shocked cocoon resulting from a trapped jet. This makes SN 2025 one of the few examples of this currently observationally rare event.</p>

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Astrophysical Journal Letters

Volume

988

Issue

1

Pagination

L14 - L14

Publisher

IOP

issn

2041-8205

eissn

2041-8213

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-09-08

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Nial Tanvir

Deposit date

2025-08-08

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