Measuring nickel masses in Type Ia supernovae using cobalt emission in nebular phase spectra
Michael J. Childress, D. John Hillier, Ivo Seitenzahl, Mark Sullivan,, Kate Maguire, Stefan Taubenberger, Richard Scalzo, Ashley Ruiter, Nadejda, Blagorodnova, Yssavo Camacho, Jayden Castillo, Nancy Elias-Rosa, Morgan, Fraser, Avishay Gal-Yam, Melissa Graham, D. Andrew Howell

TL;DR
This study uses nebular phase spectra to measure nickel masses in Type Ia supernovae, revealing two distinct explosion regimes linked to different progenitor masses and explosion mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to determine $^{56}$Ni mass from cobalt emission lines in nebular spectra, and analyzes a large sample to identify two explosion regimes in SNe Ia.
Findings
Nickel mass correlates with light curve stretch and ejected mass.
Two regimes of $^{56}$Ni yield suggest different explosion mechanisms.
Long-term stability of ionization state supports energy deposition models.
Abstract
The light curves of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are powered by the radioactive decay of Ni to Co at early times, and the decay of Co to Fe from ~60 days after explosion. We examine the evolution of the [Co III] 5892 A emission complex during the nebular phase for SNe Ia with multiple nebular spectra and show that the line flux follows the square of the mass of Co as a function of time. This result indicates both efficient local energy deposition from positrons produced in Co decay, and long-term stability of the ionization state of the nebula. We compile 77 nebular spectra of 25 SN Ia from the literature and present 17 new nebular spectra of 7 SNe Ia, including SN2014J. From these we measure the flux in the [Co III] 5892 A line and remove its well-behaved time dependence to infer the initial mass of Ni () produced in the…
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