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arxiv: 2606.25223 · v1 · pith:CMXWW55Jnew · submitted 2026-06-23 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

Supernovae with the Square Kilometre Array

Pith reviewed 2026-06-25 22:06 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords supernovaecore-collapse supernovaeSquare Kilometre Arrayradio surveyscircumstellar interactionprogenitor mass lossvolumetric ratetime-domain astronomy
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The pith

The Square Kilometre Array will discover hundreds of core-collapse supernovae each year through wide-field radio surveys.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper argues that SKA1 and its pathfinders will shift radio studies of supernovae from rare detections to routine population statistics. Sensitive commensal wide-field surveys will catch hundreds of core-collapse events annually and supply a complete count of massive-star deaths without dust hiding any. The same observations will track how supernova material collides with surrounding gas and what the original stars lost before exploding. Targeted follow-up of thermonuclear supernovae can detect or rule out radio signals expected from certain progenitor channels. These capabilities will let radio data join optical and other wavelengths as a standard tool for mapping supernova diversity and rates.

Core claim

SKA1 and its pathfinders will transform the radio study of core-collapse supernovae through sensitive, commensal wide-field surveys capable of discovering hundreds of events per year, providing a dust-unbiased census of massive-star deaths and direct measurements of the volumetric CCSN rate. The same data will probe ejecta-circumstellar medium interaction, shock microphysics, and progenitor mass-loss histories. Deep, triggered observations of thermonuclear supernovae will allow tests of competing progenitor scenarios by detecting or definitively excluding prompt radio emission expected from single-degenerate systems.

What carries the argument

Commensal wide-field surveys with SKA1 and pathfinders for discovering and monitoring radio supernovae at scale.

If this is right

  • Hundreds of core-collapse supernovae discovered per year via commensal wide-field surveys
  • Dust-unbiased census of massive-star deaths across the observable volume
  • Direct measurements of the volumetric core-collapse supernova rate
  • Constraints on ejecta-CSM interaction, shock microphysics, and progenitor mass-loss histories from the survey sample
  • Tests of single-degenerate progenitor models for Type Ia supernovae through searches for prompt radio emission

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Statistical samples could reveal how supernova properties vary with host-galaxy type or metallicity
  • Radio detections might help identify which supernovae contribute to cosmic-ray or neutrino backgrounds when cross-matched with other facilities
  • Rapid alerts from the surveys could enable coordinated multi-wavelength campaigns on the earliest phases of shock evolution
  • Long-term monitoring of the same fields might uncover rare delayed-interaction events missed by shorter optical campaigns

Load-bearing premise

The SKA will be built and will deliver the planned sensitivity, survey speed, and commensal observing modes.

What would settle it

Early SKA1 wide-field data yielding far fewer than hundreds of new radio supernovae per year or failing to support volumetric rate calculations due to insufficient coverage or sensitivity.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.25223 by A. J. Nayana, Kovi Rose, Miguel P\'erez-Torres, Poonam Chandra, Yuhei Iwata.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Circumstellar interaction picture in a typical SN. The image shows ejecta-CSM interaction and the formation of various shocked and unshocked regions. The radio emission typically originates from the forward shock. unshocked ejecta or emission from the vicinity of the contact discontinuity can generate additional optical features such as H𝛼 emission (Chugai et al., 2007). Among these diagnostics, however, r… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Plot of 8 GHz radio light curve for various types of CCSNe. The diversity in the radio luminosity, time to peak and extent of the radio emission is apparent in different classes and indicate towards diversity in progenitors. The data are taken from Nayana et al. (2018); Weiler et al. (2007, 2011); Kulkarni et al. (1998); Gangopadhyay et al. (2023); Chandra et al. (2019); Nayana and Chandra (2020). Since su… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: The contribution of the primary (blue dash–dotted lines) and secondary (red dashed lines) electrons to the total synchrotron emission (green solid line) for a wind density CSM for parameters mentioned in Petropoulou et al. (2016), the paper from which this figure is adapted and a distance of 40 Mpc is assumed. We also show 3-𝜎 SKA-Mid sensitivities at 1.7 GHz and15 GHz at 40 Mpc. There are growing pieces o… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: (Left) Estimated number of detectable CCSNe per year and the maximum observable distance. Three cases of the peak spectral luminosity are shown: 𝐿𝜈 = 1025 , 1026, and 1027 erg s−1 Hz−1 . Vertical lines indicate the assumed 1-hour (5𝜎) sensitivities of SKA1-Low and SKA1-Mid for the AA4 configuration. (Right) Same as the left panel, but divided by SN type. The assumed SN fraction of each type is taken from M… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

This chapter presents the science potential of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) for studying all classes of supernovae and their environments. It substantially updates and extends the earlier work of Perez-Torres et al. (2015), originally published in the 2015 Advancing Astrophysics with the SKA (AASKA14) volume, reflecting the dramatic progress in time-domain astronomy and radio instrumentation over the past decade. We outline how SKA1 and its pathfinders will transform the radio study of core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) through sensitive, commensal wide-field surveys capable of discovering hundreds of events per year, providing a dust-unbiased census of massive-star deaths and direct measurements of the volumetric CCSN rate. The same data will probe ejecta-circumstellar medium (CSM) interaction, shock microphysics, and progenitor mass-loss histories. Deep, triggered observations of thermonuclear supernovae (SNe Ia) will allow the SKA to test competing progenitor scenarios by detecting -- or definitively excluding -- the prompt radio emission expected from single-degenerate systems. The chapter further explores superluminous supernovae (SLSNe), delayed interaction supernovae and synergies with facilities such as ALMA, ngVLA, CTA, IceCube-Gen2, and ULTRASAT. Collectively, these studies will turn radio supernova astrophysics from a discovery-limited field into one governed by population statistics.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 0 minor

Summary. This manuscript updates and extends the 2015 AASKA14 science case (Perez-Torres et al.) for radio observations of supernovae with the Square Kilometre Array. It argues that SKA1 and its pathfinders, through sensitive commensal wide-field surveys, will discover hundreds of core-collapse supernovae per year, enabling a dust-unbiased census of massive-star deaths, direct volumetric CCSN rate measurements, and studies of ejecta-CSM interaction and progenitor mass loss. It further outlines triggered observations to test SN Ia progenitor channels via prompt radio emission, plus science cases for superluminous and delayed-interaction supernovae and synergies with ALMA, ngVLA, CTA, IceCube-Gen2, and ULTRASAT.

Significance. If the stated instrumental performance is achieved, the outlined program would shift radio supernova astrophysics from a discovery-limited to a statistics-driven field, delivering population-level constraints on massive-star death rates and explosion physics that are inaccessible at other wavelengths. The manuscript is a standard, well-scoped forward-looking review that appropriately conditions all quantitative projections on SKA1 meeting its design sensitivity, survey speed, and commensal capabilities; no new derivations or data are presented.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive review and recommendation to accept the manuscript. The summary accurately reflects the scope and intent of the chapter as an update to the 2015 AASKA14 science case.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity detected

full rationale

This is a forward-looking science case document outlining projected capabilities of the SKA for supernova studies. It contains no equations, fitted parameters, derivations, or load-bearing self-citations that reduce any claim to its own inputs by construction. All statements are conditional projections based on external telescope design specifications and prior literature, with no internal mathematical chain that could be circular. The update to Perez-Torres et al. (2015) is a normal extension of scope rather than a self-referential justification of results.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

This is a review chapter on future observational capabilities. No free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are introduced in the provided abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5807 in / 1083 out tokens · 18238 ms · 2026-06-25T22:06:57.887173+00:00 · methodology

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