Interpreting the near-infrared spectra of the 'golden standard' Type Ia supernova 2005cf
E. E. E. Gall, S. Taubenberger, M. Kromer, S. A. Sim, S. Benetti, G., Blanc, N. Elias-Rosa, W. Hillebrandt

TL;DR
This study presents nine near-infrared spectra of supernova 2005cf, analyzing its spectral evolution and comparing it with models and other supernovae to understand the physical processes shaping Type Ia supernovae.
Contribution
It provides detailed NIR spectral data of SN 2005cf and demonstrates that the W7 explosion model accurately reproduces its spectral features across UV, optical, and NIR wavelengths.
Findings
Spectral features characteristic of normal Type Ia supernovae.
Fluorescence drives the spectral energy distribution, especially in NIR.
Ejecta element distribution constrained by spectral lines.
Abstract
We present nine near-infrared (NIR) spectra of supernova (SN) 2005cf at epochs from -10 d to +42 d with respect to B-band maximum, complementing the existing excellent data sets available for this prototypical Type Ia SN at other wavelengths. The spectra show a time evolution and spectral features characteristic of normal Type Ia SNe, as illustrated by a comparison with SNe 1999ee, 2002bo and 2003du. The broad-band spectral energy distribution (SED) of SN 2005cf is studied in combined ultraviolet (UV), optical and NIR spectra at five epochs between ~ 8 d before and ~ 10 d after maximum light. We also present synthetic spectra of the hydrodynamic explosion model W7, which reproduce the key properties of SN 2005cf not only at UV-optical as previously reported, but also at NIR wavelengths. From the radiative-transfer calculations we infer that fluorescence is the driving mechanism that…
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