High-Velocity Features of Calcium and Silicon in the Spectra of Type Ia Supernovae
Jeffrey M. Silverman, Jozsef Vinko, G. H. Marion, J. Craig Wheeler,, Barnabas Barna, Tamas Szalai, Brian W. Mulligan, Alexei V. Filippenko

TL;DR
This study provides an extensive analysis of high-velocity features in Type Ia supernova spectra, revealing their occurrence patterns, correlations with other observables, and differences among supernova types.
Contribution
It offers the most detailed characterization of HVFs in SNe Ia using a large dataset, highlighting their temporal evolution and correlations with supernova properties.
Findings
HVFs of Ca II are commonly observed, except in underluminous SNe Ia.
HVFs of Si II {55} are rarer and appear mainly at early epochs.
Stronger Si II HVFs are associated with high photospheric velocities and absence of early C II absorption.
Abstract
"High-velocity features" (HVFs) are spectral features in Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) that have minima indicating significantly higher (by greater than about 6000 km/s) velocities than typical "photospheric-velocity features" (PVFs). The PVFs are absorption features with minima indicating typical photospheric (i.e., bulk ejecta) velocities (usually ~9000-15,000 km/s near B-band maximum brightness). In this work we undertake the most in-depth study of HVFs ever performed. The dataset used herein consists of 445 low-resolution optical and near-infrared (NIR) spectra (at epochs up to 5 d past maximum brightness) of 210 low-redshift SNe Ia that follow the "Phillips relation." A series of Gaussian functions is fit to the data in order to characterise possible HVFs of Ca II H&K, Si II {\lambda}6355, and the Ca II NIR triplet. The temporal evolution of the velocities and strengths of the PVFs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
