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

Open Access
Authors
  • Rob A.J. Eyles-Ferris
  • Peter G. Jonker
  • Andrew J. Levan
  • Daniele Bjørn Malesani
  • Nikhil Sarin
  • Christopher L. Fryer
  • Jillian C. Rastinejad
  • Eric Burns
  • Nial R. Tanvir
  • Paul T. O’Brien
  • Wen-Fai Fong
  • Ilya Mandel
  • Benjamin P. Gompertz
  • Charles D. Kilpatrick
  • Steven Bloemen
  • Joe S. Bright
  • Francesco Carotenuto
  • Gregory Corcoran
  • Laura Cotter
  • Paul J. Groot
  • Luca Izzo
  • Tanmoy Laskar
  • Antonio Martin-Carrillo
  • Jesse Palmerio
  • Maria E. Ravasio
  • Jan van Roestel
  • Andrea Saccardi
  • Rhaana L.C. Starling
  • Aishwarya Linesh Thakur
  • Susanna D. Vergani
  • Paul M. Vreeswijk
  • Franz E. Bauer
  • Sergio Campana
  • Jennifer A. Chacón
  • Ashley A. Chrimes
  • Stefano Covino
  • Joyce N.D. van Dalen
  • Valerio D’Elia
  • Massimiliano De Pasquale
  • Nusrin Habeeb
  • Dieter H. Hartmann
  • Agnes P.C. van Hoof
  • Páll Jakobsson
  • Yashaswi Julakanti
  • Giorgos Leloudas
  • Daniel Mata Sánchez
  • Christopher J. Nixon
  • Daniëlle L.A. Pieterse
  • Giovanna Pugliese
  • Jonathan Quirola-Vásquez
  • Ben C. Rayson
  • Ruben Salvaterra
  • Ben Schneider
  • Manuel A.P. Torres
  • Tayyaba Zafar
Publication date 20-07-2025
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L14
Volume | Issue number 988 | 1
Number of pages 23
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract

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 z = 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 (≲1051 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.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ade1d9
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011319393
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The Kangaroo’s First Hop (Final published version)
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