Origin of high-velocity ejecta and early red excess emission in the infant Type Ia supernova 2021aefx
Yuan Qi Ni, Dae-Sik Moon, Maria R. Drout, Christopher D. Matzner,, Kelvin C. C. Leong, Sang Chul Kim, Hong Soo Park, Youngdae Lee

TL;DR
SN 2021aefx, a normal Type Ia supernova, exhibited early red excess emission and high-velocity ejecta components, revealing complex explosion dynamics and ejecta structure, with implications for explosion models.
Contribution
This study provides the first precise measurements of explosion and first light epochs, identifies the fastest ejecta velocities in Type Ia SNe, and suggests asymmetric explosion processes in SN 2021aefx.
Findings
Detected ejecta velocities exceeding 40,000 km/s
Identified two distinct ejecta components with different velocities
Supported off-center delayed-detonation as a possible explosion mechanism
Abstract
SN~2021aefx is a normal Type Ia Supernova (SN) with red excess emission over the first 2 days. We present detailed analysis of this SN using our high-cadence KMTNet multi-band photometry, spectroscopy, and publicly available data. We provide the first measurements of its epochs of explosion (MJD 59529.32 0.16) as well as ``first light'' (MJD 59529.85 0.55) associated with the main ejecta distribution. This places our first detection of SN 2021aefx at 0.5 hours since ``first light'', indicating the presence of additional power sources. Our peak-spectrum confirms its Type Ia sub-classification as intermediate between Core-Normal and Broad-Line, and we estimate the ejecta mass to be 1.34 . The pre-peak spectral evolution identifies fast-expanding material reaching 40,000 km s (the fastest ever observed in Type Ia SNe)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
