Synthetic line and continuum linear-polarisation signatures of axisymmetric type II supernova ejecta
Luc Dessart, D. John Hillier

TL;DR
This paper models the linear polarisation signatures of aspherical Type II supernova ejecta, revealing complex dependencies on shape, wavelength, and time, and challenging previous assumptions about polarisation indicating asymmetry.
Contribution
It introduces detailed synthetic polarisation calculations for aspherical supernova ejecta, highlighting complex temporal and wavelength-dependent effects not captured by simpler models.
Findings
Early-time polarisation is low and complex, with sign reversals.
Line polarisation varies with shape and wavelength, reflecting ejecta asymmetry.
Polarisation evolution does not directly indicate changes in ejecta asymmetry.
Abstract
We present synthetic single-line and continuum linear-polarisation signatures due to electron scattering in axially-symmetric Type II supernovae (SNe) which we calculate using a Monte Carlo and a long-characteristic radiative-transfer code. Aspherical ejecta are produced by prescribing a latitudinal scaling or stretching of SN ejecta inputs obtained from 1-D non-LTE time-dependent calculations. We study polarisation signatures as a function of inclination, shape factor, wavelength, line identity, post-explosion time. At early times, cancellation and optical-depth effects make the polarisation intrinsically low, causing complicated sign reversals with inclination or continuum wavelength, and across line profiles. While the line polarisation is positive (negative) for an oblate (prolate) morphology at the peak and in the red wing, the continuum polarisation may be of any sign. These…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
