SN 2025adpq: A Type Ia supernova in a collisional ring formed during a major galaxy merger
Abstract
Galaxy mergers can both trigger star formation and rearrange where stars live, producing long-lived tidal structures and collisionally driven density waves (known as collisional rings) that can extend for tens of kpc from their host galaxy centers. Here we report the discovery of SN 2025adpq, a Type Ia supernova at z=0.1540, found within a collisional ring, which we call Pika's Halo, with circumference \,70 kpc that was produced by a major merger between two comparable mass galaxies ((M*/M)≈10.5). The supernova lies along the ring at a projected offset of 11.4 kpc from the nucleus of the primary galaxy (hereafter G1). Optical spectroscopy obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) and Gemini South reveal signatures consistent with merger induced ongoing star formation, while prominent Calcium H and K absorption indicates a substantial old stellar population within the ring. Therefore, we propose that SN 2025adpq may have been produced by an old progenitor system that was displaced from G1 during the head-on encounter. In this scenario, the progenitor was stripped from its parent galaxy by the collisionally induced pressure wave and exploded far from its birthplace. However, given the broad diversity in SN Ia delay times, we cannot conclusively demonstrate that the progenitor was not formed in a more recent burst of star formation triggered by the expanding pressure wave. Regardless, SN 2025adpq highlights collisional rings as a path to large offset SNe Ia, and it motivates targeted searches for faint, dynamically displaced old populations in seemingly hostless environments. We additionally identify other supernovae, including supernova siblings, in the low redshift sample of collisional ring galaxies, and find that SN 2025adpq is one of only a handful of classified supernova identified in the expanding ring of a collisional ring complex.
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