The Rise-Time Distribution of Nearby Type Ia Supernovae
Mohan Ganeshalingam, Weidong Li, and Alexei V. Filippenko

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rise-time distributions of nearby Type Ia supernovae, revealing differences based on spectral features and challenging the single-parameter light curve model, with implications for progenitor scenarios.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of B- and V-band rise times for SNe Ia, highlighting differences between normal and high-velocity types and testing models of supernova explosion mechanisms.
Findings
Normal SNe Ia have a B-band rise time of 18.03 days.
High-velocity SNe Ia have a shorter B-band rise time of 16.63 days.
The early light curve follows a power law consistent with an expanding fireball model.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the B-band and V-band rise-time distributions of nearby Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). We use a two-stretch template-fitting method to measure the rise and decline of BV light curves. Our analysis of 61 SNe with high-quality light curves indicates that the longer the time between explosion and maximum light (i.e., the rise time), the slower the decline of the light curve after maximum. However, SNe with slower post-maximum decline rates have a faster rise than would be expected from a single-parameter family of light curves, indicating that SN Ia light curves are not a single-parameter family of varying widths. Comparison of the B-band rise-time distribution for spectroscopically normal SNe Ia to those exhibiting high-velocity spectral features indicates that high-velocity (HV) SNe Ia have shorter B-band rise times compared to their spectroscopically normal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
