SIMBAD references

2014MNRAS.439.1959M - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 439, 1959-1979 (2014/April-1)

Hubble Space Telescope spectra of the Type Ia supernova SN 2011fe: a tail of low-density, high-velocity material with Z < Z.

MAZZALI P.A., SULLIVAN M., HACHINGER S., ELLIS R.S., NUGENT P.E., HOWELL D.A., GAL-YAM A., MAGUIRE K., COOKE J., THOMAS R., NOMOTO K. and WALKER E.S.

Abstract (from CDS):

Hubble Space Telescope spectroscopic observations of the nearby Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) SN 2011fe, taken on 10 epochs from -13.1 to +40.8 d relative to B-band maximum light, and spanning the far-ultraviolet (UV) to the near-infrared (IR) are presented. This spectroscopic coverage makes SN 2011fe the best-studied local SN Ia to date. SN 2011fe is a typical moderately luminous SN Ia with no evidence for dust extinction. Its near-UV spectral properties are representative of a larger sample of local events (Maguire et al.). The near-UV to optical spectra of SN 2011fe are modelled with a Monte Carlo radiative transfer code using the technique of `abundance tomography', constraining the density structure and the abundance stratification in the SN ejecta. SN 2011fe was a relatively weak explosion, with moderate Fe-group yields. The density structures of the classical model W7 and of a delayed detonation model were tested. Both have shortcomings. An ad hoc density distribution was developed which yields improved fits and is characterized by a high-velocity tail, which is absent in W7. However, this tail contains less mass than delayed detonation models. This improved model has a lower energy than one-dimensional explosion models matching typical SNe Ia (e.g. W7, WDD1; Iwamoto et al.). The derived Fe abundance in the outermost layer is consistent with the metallicity at the SN explosion site in M101 ( ∼ 0.5Z). The spectroscopic rise-time ( ∼ 19d) is significantly longer than that measured from the early optical light curve, implying a `dark phase' of ∼ 1d. A longer rise-time has significant implications when deducing the properties of the white dwarf and binary system from the early photometric behaviour.

Abstract Copyright: © 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2014)

Journal keyword(s): radiative transfer - techniques: spectroscopic - supernovae: general - supernovae: individual: SN 2011fe

Simbad objects: 7

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