TY - JOUR
T1 - SN 2019vxm
T2 - A Shocking Coincidence between Fermi and TESS
AU - Lane, Zachary G.
AU - Ridden-Harper, Ryan
AU - Rest, Sofia
AU - Rest, Armin
AU - Ransome, Conor L.
AU - Wang, Qinan
AU - Montilla, Clarinda
AU - Steed, Micaela
AU - Andreoni, Igor
AU - Armstrong, Patrick
AU - Brown, Peter J.
AU - Cooke, Jeffrey
AU - Coulter, David A.
AU - Fox, Ori
AU - Freeburn, James
AU - Galoppo, Marco
AU - Gal-Yam, Avishay
AU - Goldberg, Jared A.
AU - Harvey-Hawes, Christopher
AU - Hiramatsu, Daichi
AU - Hounsell, Rebekah
AU - Howell, D. Andrew
AU - Leicester, Brayden
AU - Lelkes, Klára
AU - Linial, Itai
AU - Luisi, Jaime
AU - McCully, Curtis
AU - Molnár, László
AU - Moore, Thomas
AU - Mourier, Pierre
AU - Nugent, Anya E.
AU - O’Neill, David
AU - Roxburgh, Hugh
AU - Shukawa, Koji
AU - Smartt, Stephen J.
AU - Smith, Nathan
AU - Smith, Ken W.
AU - Subrayan, Bhagya M.
AU - Carrasco, Sebastian Vergara
AU - Villar, V. Ashley
AU - Vinkó, József
AU - Wasserman, Tal
AU - Zenati, Yossef
AU - Zimmerman, Erez A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
PY - 2026/5/11
Y1 - 2026/5/11
N2 - Shock breakout and, in some cases, jet-driven high-energy emission are increasingly recognized as key signatures of the earliest phases of core-collapse supernovae, especially in Type IIn systems due to their dense, interaction-dominated circumstellar environments. We present a comprehensive photometric analysis of SN 2019vxm, a long-duration, luminous Type IIn supernova, (Formula presented) MV=−21.41±0.05mag, observed from X-ray to near-infrared. SN 2019vxm is the first superluminous supernovae Type IIn to be caught with well-sampled TESS photometric data on the rise and has a convincing coincident X-ray source at the time of first light. The high-cadence TESS light curve captures the early-time rise, which is well described by a broken power law with an index of n = 1.41 ± 0.04, significantly shallower than the canonical n = 2 behavior. From this, we constrain the time of first light to within 7.2 hr. We identify a spatial and temporal coincidence between SN 2019vxm and the hard X-ray/gamma-ray transient GRB 191117A, corresponding to a 3.3σ association confidence. Both the short-duration X-ray event and the lightcurve modeling are consistent with shock breakout into a dense, asymmetric circumstellar medium, indicative of a massive, compact progenitor such as a luminous blue variable transitioning to Wolf–Rayet phase embedded in a clumpy, asymmetric environment.
AB - Shock breakout and, in some cases, jet-driven high-energy emission are increasingly recognized as key signatures of the earliest phases of core-collapse supernovae, especially in Type IIn systems due to their dense, interaction-dominated circumstellar environments. We present a comprehensive photometric analysis of SN 2019vxm, a long-duration, luminous Type IIn supernova, (Formula presented) MV=−21.41±0.05mag, observed from X-ray to near-infrared. SN 2019vxm is the first superluminous supernovae Type IIn to be caught with well-sampled TESS photometric data on the rise and has a convincing coincident X-ray source at the time of first light. The high-cadence TESS light curve captures the early-time rise, which is well described by a broken power law with an index of n = 1.41 ± 0.04, significantly shallower than the canonical n = 2 behavior. From this, we constrain the time of first light to within 7.2 hr. We identify a spatial and temporal coincidence between SN 2019vxm and the hard X-ray/gamma-ray transient GRB 191117A, corresponding to a 3.3σ association confidence. Both the short-duration X-ray event and the lightcurve modeling are consistent with shock breakout into a dense, asymmetric circumstellar medium, indicative of a massive, compact progenitor such as a luminous blue variable transitioning to Wolf–Rayet phase embedded in a clumpy, asymmetric environment.
KW - Core-collapse supernovae (304)
KW - High energy astrophysics (739)
KW - Supernovae (1668)
KW - Transient sources (1851)
KW - X-ray bursts (1814)
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038464656
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ae6245
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ae6245
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AN - SCOPUS:105038464656
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 1003
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 1
M1 - 19
ER -