Revealing Type Ia supernova physics with cosmic rates and nuclear gamma rays
Shunsaku Horiuchi, John F. Beacom (Ohio State)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the physics of Type Ia supernovae using cosmic rates and nuclear gamma rays, revealing delay times and proposing advanced gamma-ray telescopes for detailed observations.
Contribution
It introduces a delay time distribution model for SNIa and assesses the potential of future gamma-ray telescopes to study supernova physics.
Findings
Delay time distribution t^{-1.0 +/- 0.3} fits data well.
Half of SNIa explode over 1 Gyr after progenitor formation.
Upcoming gamma-ray telescopes could detect up to 100 SNIa annually.
Abstract
Type Ia supernovae (SNIa) remain mysterious despite their central importance in cosmology and their rapidly increasing discovery rate. The progenitors of SNIa can be probed by the delay time between progenitor birth and explosion as SNIa. The explosions and progenitors of SNIa can be probed by MeV nuclear gamma rays emitted in the decays of radioactive nickel and cobalt into iron. We compare the cosmic star formation and SNIa rates, finding that their different redshift evolution requires a large fraction of SNIa to have large delay times. A delay time distribution of the form t^{-1.0 +/- 0.3} provides a good fit, implying 50% of SNIa explode more than ~ 1 Gyr after progenitor birth. The extrapolation of the cosmic SNIa rate to z = 0 agrees with the rate we deduce from catalogs of local SNIa. We investigate prospects for gamma-ray telescopes to exploit the facts that escaping gamma rays…
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