Infrared diagnostics of late-time core-collapse supernova spectra
Luc Dessart

TL;DR
This paper models infrared emission from core-collapse supernovae during the nebular phase, highlighting how different types and progenitor characteristics influence spectral features and luminosity evolution, with implications for future JWST observations.
Contribution
It provides detailed non-LTE radiative transfer models of infrared spectra for Type II and Ibc supernovae, revealing key diagnostics of ejecta composition and explosion properties.
Findings
Type Ibc SNe brighten in IR, with dominant lines like [NeII] and [NiII].
Infrared Ni lines trace explosive nucleosynthesis and Ni mixing.
IR Fe and Co line fluxes show diverse evolution, limiting their use as decay power indicators.
Abstract
We present nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium radiative transfer calculations of red supergiant and He-star explosions, extending previous work to focus on the infrared emission from atoms and ions in the ejecta during the nebular-phase (i.e., ~200 to ~500d) -- molecules and dust are ignored. We cover non-rotating solar-metallicity progenitors spanning an initial mass between 10 and about 40Msun and exploding as Type II or Ibc supernovae (SNe). Both photometrically and spectroscopically, the SN II models evolve distinctly from the SN Ibc models primarily because of the greater ejecta kinetic-energy-to-mass ratio in the latter, which leads to a greater gamma-ray escape together with a lower density and a higher ionization in our H-deficient ejecta. Type II SN models remain optically luminous at all times, whereas Type Ibc models progressively brighten in the infrared (which holds 80% of…
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