Keck and ESO-VLT View of the Symmetry of the Ejecta of the XRF/SN 2006aj
Paolo A. Mazzali, Ryan J. Foley, Jinsong Deng, Ferdinando Patat, Elena, Pian, Dietrich Baade, Joshua S. Bloom, Alexei V. Filippenko, Daniel A., Perley, Stefano Valenti, Lifan Wang, Koji Kawabata, Keiichi Maeda, and, Ken-ichi Nomoto

TL;DR
This study analyzes nebular spectra of SN 2006aj, revealing its ejecta symmetry, composition, and kinetic properties, and compares it to other Type Ic supernovae, providing insights into its explosion mechanism.
Contribution
It presents detailed nebular spectral modeling of SN 2006aj, revealing its ejecta symmetry, composition, and mass, and compares these properties with other supernovae to understand explosion characteristics.
Findings
Ejecta velocity ~ 7400-8000 km/s with symmetric emission lines.
Mass of 56Ni ~ 0.20 Msun consistent with light curve models.
Presence of a dense inner core containing ~ 1 Msun of oxygen and carbon.
Abstract
Nebular-phase spectra of SN 2006aj, which was discovered in coincidence with X-ray flash 060218, were obtained with Keck in 2006 July and the Very Large Telescope in 2006 September. At the latter epoch spectropolarimetry was also attempted, yielding an upper limit of ~ 2% for the polarization. The spectra show strong emission lines of [OI] and MgI], as expected from a Type Ic supernova, but weak CaII lines. The [FeII] lines that were strong in the spectra of SN 1998bw are much weaker in SN 2006aj, consistent with the lower luminosity of this SN. The outer velocity of the line-emitting ejecta is ~ 8000 km/s in July and ~ 7400 km/s in September, consistent with the relatively low kinetic energy of expansion of SN 2006aj. All emission lines have similar width, and the profiles are symmetric, indicating that no major asymmetries are present in the ejecta at the velocities sampled by the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
