Synthetic light curves and spectra for three-dimensional delayed-detonation models of Type Ia supernovae
S. A. Sim, I. R. Seitenzahl, M. Kromer, F. Ciaraldi-Schoolmann, F. K., R\"opke, M. Fink, W. Hillebrandt, R. Pakmor, A. J. Ruiter, S. Taubenberger

TL;DR
This study presents multi-dimensional radiative transfer simulations of 3D delayed-detonation models of Type Ia supernovae, comparing synthetic light curves and spectra with observations to evaluate model accuracy and limitations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed synthetic light curves and spectra for 3D delayed-detonation models, assessing their ability to reproduce observed supernova features.
Findings
Models match many observed properties of SNe Ia
Models are too red around maximum light and have high spectral line velocities
Models do not reproduce the observed width-luminosity relation
Abstract
In a companion paper, Seitenzahl et al. (2013) presented a set of three-dimensional delayed detonation models for thermonuclear explosions of near-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs (WDs). Here, we present multi-dimensional radiative transfer simulations that provide synthetic light curves and spectra for those models. The model sequence explores both changes in the strength of the deflagration phase (controlled by the ignition configuration) and the WD central density. In agreement with previous studies, we find that the strength of the deflagration significantly affects the explosion and the observables. Variations in the central density also have an influence on both brightness and colour, but overall it is a secondary parameter in our set of models. In many respects, the models yield a good match to normal Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia): peak brightness, rise/decline time scales and…
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