Radio Emission from Fast Blue Optical Transients Powered by Trans-relativistic Shocks in Confined Circumstellar Material
Abstract
Fast blue optical transients (FBOTs) are luminous, rapidly evolving explosions whose radio emission provides a sensitive probe of shock interaction and the circumstellar material (CSM) surrounding the progenitor. However, the origin of their diverse radio light-curve morphologies, especially the very steep post-peak declines seen in several well-sampled events, remains unclear. We present a forward-shock synchrotron model in which mildly relativistic ejecta interact with a dense but radially confined CSM. The CSM is described by a broken power-law density profile, and the radio emission is modeled by including both synchrotron self-absorption and external free-free absorption. Applying this framework to multi-frequency radio observations of a representative sample of FBOTs, we show that their radio diversity can be explained by shock propagation through a finite CSM shell. The early radio evolution is regulated by absorption, while the rapid post-peak fading marks the forward shock's transition from the dense inner CSM into a more tenuous outer environment. The inferred shock velocities are trans-relativistic, v sh0.1--0.5c. The radio-emitting CSM requires high mass-loading rates, M10-4--10-3\,M\, yr-1, but modest total CSM masses, M CSM10-4--10-2\,M. These properties point to brief episodes of enhanced mass loss in the final years to decades before explosion, rather than long-lived steady winds. Our results provide a dynamically consistent interpretation of FBOT radio emission and establish radio light curves as a diagnostic of the immediate pre-explosion mass-loss history of FBOT progenitors.
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