English

The Most Slowly Declining Type Ia Supernova 2001ay

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2015-05-28 v2

Abstract

We present optical and near-infrared photometry, as well as ground-based optical spectra and Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet spectra, of the Type Ia supernova (SN) 2001ay. At maximum light the Si II and Mg II lines indicated expansion velocities of 14,000 km/sec, while Si III and S II showed velocities of 9,000 km/sec There is also evidence for some unburned carbon at 12,000 km/sec. SN 2001ay exhibited a decline-rate parameter Delta m_15(B) = 0.68 \pm 0.05 mag; this and the B-band photometry at t > +25 d past maximum make it the most slowly declining Type Ia SN yet discovered. Three of four super-Chandrasekhar-mass candidates have decline rates almost as slow as this. After correction for Galactic and host-galaxy extinction, SN 2001ay had M_B = -19.19 and M_V = -19.17 mag at maximum light; thus, it was not overluminous in optical bands. In near-infrared bands it was overluminous only at the 2-sigma level at most. For a rise time of 18 d (explosion to bolometric maximum) the implied Ni-56 yield was (0.58 \pm 0.15)/alpha M_Sun, with alpha = L_max/E_Ni probably in the range 1.0 to 1.2. The Ni-56 yield is comparable to that of many Type Ia supernovae. The "normal" Ni-56 yield and the typical peak optical brightness suggest that the very broad optical light curve is explained by the trapping of the gamma rays in the inner regions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1106.3968,
  title  = {The Most Slowly Declining Type Ia Supernova 2001ay},
  author = {Kevin Krisciunas and Weidong Li and Thomas Matheson and D. Andrew Howell and Maximilian Stritzinger and Greg Aldering and Perry L. Berlind and M. Calkins and Peter Challis and Ryan Chornock and Alexander Conley and Alexei V. Filippenko and Mohan Ganeshalingam and Lisa Germany and Sergio Gonzalez and Samuel D. Gooding and Eric Hsiao and Daniel Kasen and Robert P. Kirshner and G. H. "Howie" Marion and Cesar Muena and Peter E. Nugent and M. Phelps and Mark M. Phillips and Yulei Qiu and Robert Quimby and K. Rines and Jeffrey M. Silverman and Nicholas B. Suntzeff and Rollin C. Thomas and Lifan Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1106.3968},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

57 pages, 22 figures. To be published in the Astronomical Journal (September 2011)

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