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Type Ia Supernova Progenitor Properties and Their Host Galaxies

Authors :
Chakraborty, Sudeshna
Sadler, Benjamin
Hoeflich, Peter
Hsiao, Eric
Phillips, M. M.
Burns, C. R.
Diamond, T.
Dominguez, I.
Galbany, L.
Uddin, S. A.
Ashall, C.
Krisciunas, K.
Kumar, S.
Mera, T. B.
Morrell, N.
Baron, E.
Contreras, M. C.
Stritzinger, M. D.
Suntzeff, N. N.
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal (2024), Volume 969, Number 2, 80
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present an eigenfunction method to analyze 161 visual light curves (LCs) of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) obtained by the Carnegie Supernova Project to characterize their diversity and host-galaxy correlations. The eigenfunctions are based on the delayed-detonation scenario using three parameters: the LC stretch being determined by the amount of deflagration-burning governing the 56Ni production, the main-sequence mass M_MS of the progenitor white dwarf controlling the explosion energy, and its central density rho_c shifting the 56Ni distribution. Our analysis tool (SPAT) extracts the parameters from observations and projects them into physical space using their allowed ranges M_MS < 8 M_sun, rho_c < 7-8x10^9g/cc. The residuals between fits and individual LC-points are ~ 1-3% for ~ 92% of objects. We find two distinct M_MS groups corresponding to a fast (~ 40-65 Myrs) and a slow(~ 200-500 Myrs) stellar evolution. Most underluminous SNe Ia have hosts with low star formation but high M_MS, suggesting slow evolution times of the progenitor system. 91T-likes SNe show very similar LCs and high M_MS and are correlated to star formation regions, making them potentially important tracers of star formation in the early Universe out to z = 4-11. Some 6% outliers with `non-physical' parameters can be attributed to superluminous SNe Ia and subluminous SNe Ia with hosts of active star formation. For deciphering the SNe Ia diversity and high-precision SNe Ia cosmology, the importance is shown for LCs covering out to ~ 60 days past maximum. Finally, our method and results are discussed within the framework of multiple explosion scenarios, and in light of upcoming surveys.<br />Comment: 42 pages, 22 figures, 6 tables in main text, 2 tables in appendix. This work has been published in the ApJ journal and is in partial fulfillment of the PhD thesis of the first author

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal (2024), Volume 969, Number 2, 80
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.03473
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad4702