5.9 keV Mn K-shell X-ray luminosity from the decay of 55Fe in Type Ia supernova models
I. R. Seitenzahl, A. Summa, F. Krauss, S. A. Sim, R. Diehl, D., Elsaesser, M. Fink, W. Hillebrandt, M. Kromer, K. Maeda, K. Mannheim, R., Pakmor, F. K. Roepke, A. J. Ruiter, J. Wilms

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the 5.9 keV Mn K-alpha X-ray line from 55Fe decay can distinguish between different Type Ia supernova explosion models, with implications for future X-ray observations of nearby supernovae.
Contribution
It introduces the use of the 5.9 keV X-ray line as a diagnostic tool to differentiate Type Ia supernova explosion models through radiation transport simulations.
Findings
Delayed-detonation model produces 3.5 times more 55Fe than merger model.
The Mn K-alpha line peaks 5-6 years after explosion.
Detection prospects are promising with current and future X-ray telescopes.
Abstract
We show that the X-ray line flux of the Mn Kalpha line at 5.9 keV from the decay of 55Fe is a promising diagnostic to distinguish between Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) explosion models. Using radiation transport calculations, we compute the line flux for two 3D explosion models: a near-Chandrasekhar mass delayed detonation and a violent merger of two white dwarfs. Both models are based on solar metallicity zero-age main sequence progenitors. Due to explosive nuclear burning at higher density, the delayed-detonation model synthesises 3.5 times more radioactive 55Fe than the merger model. As a result, we find that the peak Mn Kalpha line flux of the delayed-detonation model exceeds that of the merger model by a factor of 4.5. Since in both models the 5.9 keV X-ray flux peaks five to six years after the explosion, a single measurement of the X-ray line emission at this time can place a…
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.
