Type Iax Supernovae: A New Class of Stellar Explosion
Ryan J. Foley, P. J. Challis, R. Chornock, M. Ganeshalingam, W. Li, G., H. Marion, N. I. Morrell, G. Pignata, M. D. Stritzinger, J. M. Silverman, X., Wang, J. P. Anderson, A. V. Filippenko, W. L. Freedman, M. Hamuy, S. W. Jha,, R. P. Kirshner, C. McCully, S. E. Persson

TL;DR
Type Iax supernovae are a distinct class of stellar explosions similar to SNe Ia but with lower velocities and luminosities, likely originating from white dwarf systems with helium star accretion, providing insights into diverse supernova mechanisms.
Contribution
This paper characterizes the properties of SNe Iax, establishing their observational features, progenitor evidence, and proposing a binary white dwarf explosion model, expanding understanding of peculiar supernovae.
Findings
SNe Iax have lower velocities and luminosities than SNe Ia.
Progenitors are likely white dwarf systems with helium star accretion.
Estimated occurrence rate is about 31 per 100 SNe Ia.
Abstract
We describe observed properties of the Type Iax class of supernovae (SNe Iax), consisting of SNe observationally similar to its prototypical member, SN 2002cx. The class currently has 25 members, and we present optical photometry and/or optical spectroscopy for most of them. SNe Iax are spectroscopically similar to SNe Ia, but have lower maximum-light velocities (2000 < |v| < 8000 km/s), typically lower peak magnitudes (-14.2 > M_V,peak > -18.9 mag), and most have hot photospheres. Relative to SNe Ia, SNe Iax have low luminosities for their light-curve shape. There is a correlation between luminosity and light-curve shape, similar to that of SNe Ia, but offset from that of SNe Ia and with larger scatter. Despite a host-galaxy morphology distribution that is highly skewed to late-type galaxies without any SNe Iax discovered in elliptical galaxies, there are several indications that the…
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