X-ray Emission from SN 2012ca: A Type Ia-CSM Supernova Explosion in a Dense Surrounding Medium
C. D. Bochenek (University of Chicago, Caltech), Vikram. V. Dwarkadas, (University of Chicago), Jeffrey M. Silverman (University of Texas), Ori D., Fox (STScI), Roger A. Chevalier (University of Virginia), Nathan Smith, (Steward Observatory)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of X-ray emission from a Type Ia-CSM supernova, SN 2012ca, revealing a dense, asymmetric circumstellar medium that challenges previous assumptions about Type Ia supernova environments.
Contribution
It provides the first X-ray detection of a Type Ia-CSM supernova, indicating a high-density, asymmetric circumstellar medium and exploring implications for supernova progenitor models.
Findings
X-ray emission detected 500-800 days after explosion
High-density circumstellar medium with n > 10^8 cm^-3
Asymmetric medium with possible clumps or disk structures
Abstract
X-ray emission is one of the signposts of circumstellar interaction in supernovae (SNe), but until now, it has been observed only in core-collapse SNe. The level of thermal X-ray emission is a direct measure of the density of the circumstellar medium (CSM), and the absence of X-ray emission from Type Ia SNe has been interpreted as a sign of a very low density CSM. In this paper, we report late-time (500--800 days after discovery) X-ray detections of SN 2012ca in {\it Chandra} data. The presence of hydrogen in the initial spectrum led to a classification of Type Ia-CSM, ostensibly making it the first SN~Ia detected with X-rays. Our analysis of the X-ray data favors an asymmetric medium, with a high-density component which supplies the X-ray emission. The data suggest a number density cm in the higher-density medium, which is consistent with the large observed Balmer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
