A reddening-free method to estimate the $^{56}$Ni mass of Type Ia supernovae
S. Dhawan, B. Leibundgut, J. Spyromilio, S. Blondin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a reddening-free method to estimate the $^{56}$Ni mass in Type Ia supernovae by correlating near-infrared light curve features with bolometric luminosity, validated against radiative-transfer models and applied to a large sample.
Contribution
The study develops a new reddening-free technique linking the second maximum in near-infrared light curves to peak luminosity, enabling accurate $^{56}$Ni mass estimates for diverse SNe Ia.
Findings
The $L_{max}$ vs. $t_2$ relation is validated against models within 10% accuracy.
The method yields consistent $^{56}$Ni masses with gamma-ray observations.
Super-Chandrasekhar explosions deviate from the established luminosity relation.
Abstract
The increase in the number of Type Ia supernovae (SNe\,Ia) has demonstrated that the population shows larger diversity than has been assumed in the past. The reasons (e.g. parent population, explosion mechanism) for this diversity remain largely unknown. We have investigated a sample of SNe\,Ia near-infrared light curves and have correlated the phase of the second maximum with the bolometric peak luminosity. The peak bolometric luminosity is related to the time of the second maximum (relative to the {\it B} light curve maximum) as follows : . Ni masses can be derived from the peak luminosity based on Arnett's rule, which states that the luminosity at maximum is equal to instantaneous energy generated by the nickel decay. We check this assumption against recent radiative-transfer…
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.
