Spectropolarimetry of the Type IIb Supernova 2001ig
J.R. Maund (1), J.C. Wheeler (1), F. Patat (2), L. Wang (3), D. Baade, (2), P.A. Hoflich (4) ((1) UT Austin, (2) ESO, (3) Texas A&M, (4) Florida, State)

TL;DR
This paper presents spectropolarimetric observations of the Type IIb supernova 2001ig at three stages, revealing evolving polarization properties that suggest a mostly spherical ejecta with asymmetries linked to a binary progenitor system.
Contribution
First detailed spectropolarimetric study of SN 2001ig across multiple phases, showing polarization evolution and implications for supernova geometry and progenitor systems.
Findings
Low interstellar polarization of 0.17%.
Increase in polarization to ~1% when hydrogen layer becomes transparent.
Polarization angle rotation indicates changing asymmetries.
Abstract
We present spectropolarimetric observations of the Type IIb SN 2001ig in NGC 7424; conducted with the ESO VLT FORS1 on 2001 Dec 16, 2002 Jan 3 and 2002 Aug 16 or 13, 31 and 256 days post-explosion. These observations are at three different stages of the SN evolution: (1) The hydrogen-rich photospheric phase, (2) the Type II to Type Ib transitional phase and (3) the nebular phase. At each of these stages, the observations show remarkably different polarization properties as a function of wavelength. We show that the degree of interstellar polarization is 0.17%. The low intrinsic polarization (~0.2%) at the first epoch is consistent with an almost spherical (<10% deviation from spherical symmetry) hydrogen dominated ejecta. Similar to SN 1987A and to Type IIP SNe, a sharp increase in the degree of the polarization (~1%) is observed when the outer hydrogen layer becomes optically thin by…
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