Late-time Spectroscopy of Type Iax Supernovae
Ryan J. Foley, Saurabh W. Jha, Yen-Chen Pan, WeiKang Zheng, Lars, Bildsten, Alexei V. Filippenko, Daniel Kasen

TL;DR
This paper studies late-time spectra of Type Iax supernovae, revealing diversity and proposing a two-component model involving ejecta and a remnant wind to explain spectral features and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive late-time spectral sequence for SNe Iax and proposes a novel two-component model to explain spectral diversity and long-lived photospheres.
Findings
Late-time spectra show diversity with narrow and broad forbidden lines.
SNe Iax with broader forbidden lines are more luminous and have higher ejecta velocities.
A two-component model explains spectral features and the presence of a long-lived photosphere.
Abstract
We examine the late-time (t > 200 days after peak brightness) spectra of Type Iax supernovae (SNe Iax), a low-luminosity, low-energy class of thermonuclear stellar explosions observationally similar to, but distinct from, Type Ia supernovae. We present new spectra of SN 2014dt, resulting in the most complete published late-time spectral sequence of a SN Iax. At late times, SNe Iax have generally similar spectra, all with a similar continuum shape and strong forbidden-line emission. However, there is also significant diversity where some late-time SN Iax spectra display narrow P-Cygni features and a continuum indicative of a photosphere in addition to strong narrow forbidden lines, while others have no obvious P-Cygni features, strong broad forbidden lines, and weak narrow forbidden lines. Finally, some SNe Iax have spectra intermediate to these two varieties with weak P-Cygni features…
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