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A type Ia supernova at the heart of superluminous transient SN 2006gy

Anders Jerkstrand, Keiichi Maeda, Koji S. Kawabata

2020Science45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Superluminous supernovae radiate up to 100 times more energy than normal supernovae. The origin of this energy and the nature of the stellar progenitors of these transients are poorly understood. We identify neutral iron lines in the spectrum of one such supernova, SN 2006gy, and show that they require a large mass of iron (≳0.3 solar masses) expanding at 1500 kilometers per second. By modeling a standard type Ia supernova hitting a shell of circumstellar material, we produce a light curve and late-time iron-dominated spectrum that match the observations of SN 2006gy. In such a scenario, common envelope evolution of a progenitor binary system can synchronize envelope ejection and supernova explosion and may explain these bright transients.

Topics & Concepts

SupernovaPhysicsAstrophysicsLight curveEnvelope (radar)Transient (computer programming)Solar massSpectral lineEnergy spectrumType II supernovaEmission spectrumEnergy (signal processing)EjectaAstronomyPulse (music)Stellar evolutionProgenitorPhotospherePair-instability supernovaType (biology)StarsCommon envelopeEvent (particle physics)Gamma-ray bursts and supernovaeNeutrino Physics ResearchAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
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