A High-Velocity Scatterer Revealed in the Thinning Ejecta of a Type II Supernova
Douglas C. Leonard, Luc Dessart, D. John Hillier, Giuliano Pignata, G., Grant Williams, Jennifer L. Hoffman, Peter Milne, Nathan Smith, Paul S., Smith, Harish G. Khandrika

TL;DR
This study reveals a high-velocity, radioactive nickel clump in a Type II supernova's ejecta through unique nebular spectropolarimetry, demonstrating the potential of polarization data to uncover explosion asymmetries.
Contribution
First detection of a high-velocity radioactive nickel clump in a supernova using nebular spectropolarimetry, linking polarization features to explosion asymmetries.
Findings
Polarized flux spectrum closely matches total flux spectrum with 92% correlation.
High-velocity nickel clump (>4,500 km/sec) explains observed polarization features.
Detection of asymmetries supports models of non-spherical supernova explosions.
Abstract
We present deep, nebular-phase spectropolarimetry of the Type II-P/L SN 2013ej, obtained 167 days after explosion with the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope. The polarized flux spectrum appears as a nearly perfect (92% correlation), redshifted (by ~4,000 km/sec) replica of the total flux spectrum. Such a striking correspondence has never been observed before in nebular-phase supernova spectropolarimetry, although data capable of revealing it have heretofore been only rarely obtained. Through comparison with 2D polarized radiative transfer simulations of stellar explosions, we demonstrate that localized ionization produced by the decay of a high-velocity, spatially confined clump of radioactive 56-Ni -- synthesized by and launched as part of the explosion with final radial velocity exceeding 4,500 km/sec -- can reproduce the observations through enhanced electron…
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