No trace of a single-degenerate companion in late spectra of SNe 2011fe and 2014J
P. Lundqvist, A. Nyholm, F. Taddia, J. Sollerman, J. Johansson, C., Kozma, N. Lundqvist, C. Fransson, P.M. Garnavich, M. Kromer, B.J. Shappee, A., Goobar

TL;DR
This study searches for signatures of non-degenerate companion material in late spectra of SNe 2011fe and 2014J, finding no evidence and setting strict limits on hydrogen and helium-rich gas, which constrains progenitor models.
Contribution
It provides the most stringent limits yet on hydrogen-rich ablated material in these supernovae, challenging certain single-degenerate progenitor scenarios.
Findings
No detectable hydrogen or helium emission lines in late spectra.
Limits on hydrogen-rich gas are 0.003 and 0.0085 solar masses for SNe 2011fe and 2014J.
SN 2014J shows unique nebular redshift and slow Si II decline, indicating diverse explosion properties.
Abstract
Left-over, ablated material from a possible non-degenerate companion can reveal itself after about one year in spectra of Type Ia SNe (SNe Ia). We have searched for such material in spectra of SN 2011fe (at 294 days after the explosion) and for SN 2014J (315 days past explosion). The observations are compared with numerical models simulating the expected line emission. The spectral lines sought for are H-alpha, [O I] 6300 and [Ca II] 7291,7324, and the expected width of these lines is about 1000 km/s. No signs of these lines can be traced in any of the two supernovae. When systematic uncertainties are included, the limits on hydrogen-rich ablated gas in SNe 2011fe and 2014J are 0.003 M_sun and 0.0085 M_sun, respectively, where the limit for SN 2014J is the second lowest ever, and the limit for SN 2011fe is a revision of a previous limit. Limits are also put on helium-rich ablated gas.…
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