A New Method to Constrain Supernova Fractions Using X-ray Observations of Clusters of Galaxies
Esra Bulbul, Randall K. Smith, and Michael Loewenstein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new spectral fitting method called snapec to directly measure supernova contributions to the metal enrichment in galaxy clusters using X-ray data, providing a self-consistent way to estimate SN numbers and types.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel XSPEC model, snapec, that uses SN yield models to directly fit X-ray spectra and determine supernova fractions and total explosion counts in galaxy clusters.
Findings
SN yields from literature fit observed spectra well.
Approximately 30% of supernovae are Type Ia in A3112.
Estimated total supernova explosions are about 1.06 x 10^9.
Abstract
Supernova (SN) explosions enrich the intra-cluster medium (ICM) both by creating and dispersing metals. We introduce a method to measure the number of SNe and relative contribution of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) and core-collapse supernovae (SNe cc) by directly fitting X-ray spectral observations. The method has been implemented as an XSPEC model called snapec. snapec utilizes a single temperature thermal plasma code (apec) to model the spectral emission based on metal abundances calculated using the latest SN yields from SN Ia and SN cc explosion models. This approach provides a self-consistent single set of uncertainties on the total number of SN explosions and relative fraction of SN types in the ICM over the cluster lifetime by directly allowing these parameters to be determined by SN yields provided by simulations. We apply our approach to the XMM-Newton European Photon Imaging…
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.
