Infrared Spectropolarimetric Detection of Intrinsic Polarization from a Core-Collapse Supernova
Samaporn Tinyanont, Maxwell Millar-Blanchaer, Mansi Kasliwal, Dimitri, Mawet, Douglas C Leonard, Mattia Bulla, Kishalay De, Nemanja Jovanovic,, Matthew Hankins, Gautam Vasisht, Eugene Serabyn

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the use of infrared spectropolarimetry to detect and analyze the intrinsic polarization of core-collapse supernovae, revealing insights into their ejecta geometry and asymmetry.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new highly sensitive IR spectropolarimetric method for observing supernovae, enabling more accurate measurements of ejecta shape and intrinsic polarization.
Findings
SN 2018hna shows 2.0% polarization, suggesting a prolate ejecta with axis ratio <0.48.
SN 2020oi exhibits 0.37% polarization, indicating possible 10% asymmetry.
Type Ia supernovae have polarization less than 1.08%, implying less than 20% asymmetry.
Abstract
Massive stars die an explosive death as a core-collapse supernova (CCSN). The exact physical processes that cause the collapsing star to rebound into an explosion are not well-understood, and the key in resolving this issue may lie in the measurement of the shape of CCSNe ejecta. Spectropolarimetry is the only way to perform this measurement for CCSNe outside of the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds. We present an infrared (IR) spectropolarimetric detection of a CCSN, enabled by the new highly sensitive WIRC+Pol instrument at Palomar Observatory, that can observe CCSNe (M = -17 mags) out to 20 Mpc to ~0.1% polarimetric precision. IR spectropolarimetry is less affected than optical by dust scattering in the circumstellar and interstellar media, thereby providing a more unbiased probe of the intrinsic geometry of the SN ejecta. SN 2018hna, a SN 1987A-like explosion, shows 2.0+-0.3%…
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