ZTF Early Observations of Type Ia Supernovae II: First Light, the Initial Rise, and Time to Reach Maximum Brightness
A. A. Miller, Y. Yao, M. Bulla, C. Pankow, E. C. Bellm, S. B. Cenko,, R. Dekany, C. Fremling, M. J. Graham, T. Kupfer, R. R. Laher, A. A. Mahabal,, F. J. Masci, P. E. Nugent, R. Riddle, B. Rusholme, R. M. Smith, D. L. Shupe,, J. van Roestel, and S. R. Kulkarni

TL;DR
This study analyzes early observations of 127 Type Ia supernovae from ZTF, measuring their rise times and initial evolution, revealing a mean rise time around 19-22 days and identifying biases in high-redshift measurements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive Bayesian analysis of early supernova light curves, quantifies typical rise times, and uncovers biases affecting high-redshift supernova observations.
Findings
Mean rise time is approximately 19 days.
Power-law index of early light curve is consistent with 2.
Bias in high-redshift rise time estimates was identified.
Abstract
While it is clear that Type Ia supernovae (SNe) are the result of thermonuclear explosions in C/O white dwarfs (WDs), a great deal remains uncertain about the binary companion that facilitates the explosive disruption of the WD. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of a large, unique data set of 127 SNeIa with exquisite coverage by the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). High-cadence (six observations per night) ZTF observations allow us to measure the SN rise time and examine its initial evolution. We develop a Bayesian framework to model the early rise as a power law in time, which enables the inclusion of priors in our model. For a volume-limited subset of normal SNeIa, we find that the mean power-law index is consistent with 2 in the -band (), as expected in the expanding fireball model. There are, however, individual SNe that are…
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