Observations of the Very Young Type Ia Supernova 2019np with Early-excess Emission
Hanna Sai, Xiaofeng Wang, Nancy Elias-Rosa, Yi Yang, Jujia Zhang,, Weili Lin, Jun Mo, Anthony L. Piro, Xiangyun Zeng, Reguitti Andrea, Peter, Brown, Christopher R. Burns, Yongzhi Cai, Achille Fiore, Eric Y. Hsiao, Jordi, Isern, K. Itagaki, Wenxiong Li, Zhitong Li

TL;DR
This study presents early and late observations of SN 2019np, a nearby Type Ia supernova, revealing early excess emission likely caused by surface nickel mixing, which constrains explosion models.
Contribution
First detailed early-time observations of SN 2019np showing early excess emission, supporting surface nickel mixing as the cause.
Findings
Early excess flux up to 5% above models
Color evolution consistent with surface nickel mixing
No hydrogen detected in late spectra
Abstract
Early-time radiative signals from type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) can provide important constraints on the explosion mechanism and the progenitor system. We present observations and analysis of SN 2019np, a nearby SN Ia discovered within 1-2 days after the explosion. Follow-up observations were conducted in optical, ultraviolet, and near-infrared bands, covering the phases from 16.7 days to +367.8 days relative to its band peak luminosity. The photometric and spectral evolutions of SN 2019np resembles the average behavior of normal SNe Ia. The absolute B-band peak magnitude and the post-peak decline rate are mag and mag, respectively. No Hydrogen line has been detected in the near-infrared and nebular-phase spectra of SN 2019np. Assuming that the Ni powering the light curve is centrally located, we…
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