Helium as a signature of the double detonation in Type Ia supernovae
Christine E. Collins, Stuart A. Sim, Luke. J. Shingles, Sabrina, Gronow, Friedrich K. Roepke, Ruediger Pakmor, Ivo R. Seitenzahl, Markus, Kromer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that helium spectral features, specifically He I 10830, can serve as observable signatures of the double detonation mechanism in Type Ia supernovae, using advanced non-LTE radiative transfer simulations.
Contribution
The paper introduces the first non-LTE radiative transfer simulation including non-thermal electron effects to identify helium spectral signatures in supernova ejecta.
Findings
He I 10830 feature appears shortly after explosion
Feature evolves and separates from Mg II over time
Simulation matches observed spectral features in iPTF13ebh
Abstract
The double detonation is a widely discussed mechanism to explain Type Ia supernovae from explosions of sub-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs. In this scenario, a helium detonation is ignited in a surface helium shell on a carbon/oxygen white dwarf, which leads to a secondary carbon detonation. Explosion simulations predict high abundances of unburnt helium in the ejecta, however, radiative transfer simulations have not been able to fully address whether helium spectral features would form. This is because helium can not be sufficiently excited to form spectral features by thermal processes, but can be excited by collisions with non-thermal electrons, which most studies have neglected. We carry out a full non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE) radiative transfer simulation for an instance of a double detonation explosion model, and include a non-thermal treatment of fast electrons.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
