The supernova delay time distribution in galaxy clusters and implications for Type-Ia progenitors and metal enrichment
Dan Maoz, Keren Sharon, Avishay Gal-Yam

TL;DR
This study analyzes the supernova delay time distribution in galaxy clusters to understand Type-Ia progenitors and metal enrichment, finding a power-law distribution consistent with double-degenerate models and indicating most SNe Ia occur within 1 Gyr of star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive DTD measurement in galaxy clusters, constrains progenitor models, and suggests a mixed population of prompt and delayed SNe Ia.
Findings
The DTD peaks at 0-2.2 Gyr with a tail up to ~10 Gyr.
A t^{-1.2} power-law DTD fits the data well.
Double-degenerate models can match observations if scaled up.
Abstract
Knowledge of the supernova (SN) delay time distribution (DTD) - the SN rate versus time that would follow a hypothetical brief burst of star formation - can shed light on SN progenitors and physics. We compile recent measurements of the Type-Ia SN (SN Ia) rate in galaxy clusters at redshifts z=0-1.45. Together with the observed iron-to-stellar mass ratio in clusters, which constrains the time-integrated number of SN Ia events in clusters, we recover the DTD of SNe Ia in cluster environments. The DTD peaks at the shortest time-delay interval we probe, 0<t<2.2 Gyr, with a low tail out to delays of ~10 Gyr, and is remarkably consistent with several recent DTD reconstructions based on different methods, in different environments. We test DTD models from the literature, requiring that they simultaneously reproduce the observed cluster SN rates and the observed iron-to-stellar mass ratios. A…
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