Gamma-ray lines from SN2014J
Thomas Siegert, Roland Diehl

TL;DR
This paper reports early detection of gamma-ray lines from SN2014J, revealing unexpected asymmetries and suggesting a non-standard explosion mechanism involving outer-layer $^{56}$Ni production.
Contribution
First observation of early gamma-ray lines from $^{56}$Ni in SN2014J, indicating asymmetry and non-spherical explosion features.
Findings
Early $^{56}$Ni gamma-ray lines detected at 158 and 812 keV.
Evidence of $^{56}$Ni at the supernova outskirts, implying asymmetry.
First gamma-ray light curve of a Type Ia supernova obtained.
Abstract
On 21 January 2014, SN2014J was discovered in M82 and found to be the closest type Ia supernova (SN Ia) in the last four decades. INTEGRAL observed SN2014J from the end of January until late June for a total exposure time of about 7 Ms. SNe Ia light curves are understood to be powered by the radioactive decay of iron peak elements of which Ni is dominantly synthesized during the thermonuclear disruption of a CO white dwarf (WD). The measurement of -ray lines from the decay chain NiCoFe provides unique information about the explosion in supernovae. Canonical models assume Ni buried deeply in the supernova cloud, absorbing most of the early -rays, and only the consecutive decay of Co should become directly observable through the overlaying material several weeks after the explosion when the supernova…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
