Secondary parameters of type Ia supernova light curves
Author
Abstract
High-quality observations of B and V light curves obtained at Las Campanas Observatory for local Type Ia
Supernovae (SNe Ia) show clear evidence that SNe Ia with the same brightness decline or stretch may have
systematic and independent deviations at times t 5 days before and at times t 30 days after maximum light.
This suggests the existence of two independent secondary parameters that control the shape of SN Ia light curves
in addition to the primary light curve parameter, stretch s or Δm15. The secondary parameters may reflect two
independent physical effects caused by variations in the initial carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) profile in the progenitor
and the initial central density ρc in a carbon–oxygen white dwarf exploding as an SN Ia. Theoretical light curves
of delayed detonation SN Ia models with varying progenitor masses on the main sequence, varying accretion rates,
and varying primordial metallicity reproduce two morphologically different and independent types of variations in
observed visual light curves. These calculations predict small variations of ≈0.05 mag in the absolute brightness of
SNe Ia which are correlated with the variations of progenitor mass on the main-sequence MMS, which changes the
C/O profile, and ρc, which depends on the accretion rate. Such variations in real supernovae will induce systematic
errors in SN Ia calibration at high redshifts. A physically motivated three-parameter, s, C/O, ρc, template for
SNe Ia light curves might take these variations into account. Comparison between the theoretical predictions and
the observational results agree qualitatively; however, the observations show variations between the B and V light
curves that are not expected from the modeling and may indicate limitations in the details of the theoretical models.
General note
The work presented in this paper has been carried
out within the NSF project “Collaborative research: Three-
Dimensional Simulations of Type Ia Supernovae: Constraining
Models with Observations” whose goal is to test and constrain
the physics of supernovae by observations and improve SNe Ia
as tools for high-precision cosmology. The project involves
the University of Chicago (AST-0709181), the University of
Oklahoma (AST-0707704), Florida State University
(AST-0708855), Texas A&M (AST-0708873), the University
of Chile in Santiago, and the Las Campanas Observatory,
Chile. This research was also supported, in part, by the NSF
grant AST-0703902 to P.A.H. and US Department of Energy
Award Number DE-FG02-07ER41517 to E.B. M.H. and G.F.
acknowledge support from Fondecyt (1060808 and 3090004),
Programa Iniciativa Cient´ıfica Milenio de MIDEPLAN’
(P06-045-F), and CONICYT (FONDAP 15010003 and PFB
06). The authors are especially grateful to the members of the
Carnegie Supernova Project team for the access to observational
data prior to publication. Artículo de publicación ISI
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125419
DOI: doi:10.1088/0004-637X/710/1/444
Quote Item
The Astrophysical Journal, 710:444–455, 2010 February 10
Collections