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1.
Subluminal pulses in the surface-scintillator detectors of AugerPrime
Tobias Schulze, Andrej Filipčič, Jon Paul Lundquist, Shima Ujjani Shivashankara, Samo Stanič, Serguei Vorobiov, Danilo Zavrtanik, Marko Zavrtanik, 2025, published scientific conference contribution

Abstract: In extensive air showers, the signals from the electromagnetic and muonic components typically span a few microseconds in scintillation detectors. Neutrons are the only stable neutral hadrons over the timescale of air showers. They lose energy exclusively through hadronic interactions and quasi-elastic scattering, which results in their high abundance at ground level. These neutrons can produce delayed pulses in scintillation detectors, appearing up to several milliseconds after the primary shower signal. This allows us to probe hadronic interactions in the development of air showers. In this study, we characterize such subluminal pulses using the first measurements from the scintillator surface detectors of the AugerPrime upgrade of the Pierre Auger Observatory.
Keywords: ultra-high-energy cosmic rays, Pierre Auger Observatory, extensive air showers, AugerPrime upgrade
Published in RUNG: 28.03.2025; Views: 349; Downloads: 7
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2.
Eruptive mass loss less than a year before the explosion of superluminous supernovae : I. The cases of SN 2020xga and SN 2022xgc
A. Gkini, C. Fransson, Ragnhild Lunnan, S. Schulze, F. Poidevin, N. Sarin, R. Könyves-Tóth, Jesper Sollerman, Mateusz Bronikowski, Tanja Petrushevska, 2025, original scientific article

Abstract: We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2020xga and SN 2022xgc, two hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae (SLSNe-I) at z = 0.4296 and z = 0.3103, respectively, which show an additional set of broad Mg II absorption lines, blueshifted by a few thousands kilometer second−1 with respect to the host galaxy absorption system. Previous work interpreted this as due to resonance line scattering of the SLSN continuum by rapidly expanding circumstellar material (CSM) expelled shortly before the explosion. The peak rest-frame g-band magnitude of SN 2020xga is −22.30 ± 0.04 mag and of SN 2022xgc is −21.97 ± 0.05 mag, placing them among the brightest SLSNe-I. We used high-quality spectra from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths to model the Mg II line profiles and infer the properties of the CSM shells. We find that the CSM shell of SN 2020xga resides at ∼1.3 × 1016 cm, moving with a maximum velocity of 4275 km s−1, and the shell of SN 2022xgc is located at ∼0.8 × 1016 cm, reaching up to 4400 km s−1. These shells were expelled ∼11 and ∼5 months before the explosions of SN 2020xga and SN 2022xgc, respectively, possibly as a result of luminous-blue-variable-like eruptions or pulsational pair instability (PPI) mass loss. We also analyzed optical photometric data and modeled the light curves, considering powering from the magnetar spin-down mechanism. The results support very energetic magnetars, approaching the mass-shedding limit, powering these SNe with ejecta masses of ∼7 − 9 M⊙. The ejecta masses inferred from the magnetar modeling are not consistent with the PPI scenario pointing toward stars > 50 M⊙ He-core; hence, alternative scenarios such as fallback accretion and CSM interaction are discussed. Modeling the spectral energy distribution of the host galaxy of SN 2020xga reveals a host mass of 107.8 M⊙, a star formation rate of 0.96−0.26+0.47 M⊙ yr−1, and a metallicity of ∼0.2 Z⊙.
Keywords: eruptive mass, loss, supernovae
Published in RUNG: 04.03.2025; Views: 550; Downloads: 7
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