Effects of Explosion Asymmetry and Viewing Angle on the Type Ia Supernova Color and Luminosity Calibration
K. Maeda, G. Leloudas, S. Taubenberger, M. Stritzinger, J. Sollerman,, N. Elias-Rosa, S. Benetti, M. Hamuy, G. Folatelli, P. A. Mazzali

TL;DR
This study investigates how explosion asymmetry and viewing angle influence the observed color and luminosity of Type Ia supernovae, revealing intrinsic color variations linked to explosion geometry and viewing perspective.
Contribution
It introduces a correlation between nebular emission-line shifts and supernova color, suggesting intrinsic color variation due to explosion asymmetry and viewing angle effects.
Findings
Correlation between late-time emission-line shift and peak B-V color.
Viewing angle significantly affects supernova color and luminosity residuals.
Simulation predicts strong color-shift correlation and weaker luminosity residual correlation.
Abstract
Phenomenological relations exist between the peak luminosity and other observables of type Ia supernovae (SNe~Ia), that allow one to standardize their peak luminosities. However, several issues are yet to be clarified: SNe~Ia show color variations after the standardization. Also, individual SNe~Ia can show residuals in their standardized peak absolute magnitude at the level of mag. In this paper, we explore how the color and luminosity residual are related to the wavelength shift of nebular emission lines observed at days after maximum light. A sample of 11 SNe Ia which likely suffer from little host extinction indicates a correlation () between the peak color and the late-time emission-line shift. Furthermore, a nearly identical relation applies for a larger sample in which only three SNe with mag are excluded. Following the…
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