Back to Search Start Over

SN 2013aa and SN 2017cbv:Two Sibling Type Ia Supernovae in the Spiral Galaxy NGC 5643

Authors :
Kevin Krisciunas
C. Gonzalez
Christopher R. Burns
Chris Ashall
Peter Hoeflich
Eric Hsiao
Nicholas B. Suntzeff
Joshua D. Simon
J. Vílchez
Maximilian Stritzinger
Jaime Vargas-González
S. Holmbo
Anthony L. Piro
David J. Sand
Syed Uddin
Mark M. Phillips
Charles D. Kilpatrick
Nahir Muñoz-Elgueta
Lluís Galbany
N. Ulloa
Ricardo Flores
Abdo Campillay
Peter J. Brown
Carlos Contreras
César Rojas-Bravo
Ryan J. Foley
Robert P. Kirshner
Nidia Morrell
Wendy L. Freedman
Source :
Burns, C R, Ashall, C, Contreras, C, Brown, P, Stritzinger, M, Phillips, M M, Flores, R, Suntzeff, N B, Hsiao, E Y, Uddin, S, Simon, J D, Krisciunas, K, Campillay, A, Foley, R J, Freedman, W L, Galbany, L, González, C, Hoeflich, P, Holmbo, S, Kilpatrick, C D, Kirshner, R P, Morrell, N, Muñoz-Elgueta, N, Piro, A L, Rojas-Bravo, C, Sand, D, Vargas-González, J, Ulloa, N & Vilchez, J A 2020, ' SN 2013aa and SN 2017cbv : Two Sibling Type Ia Supernovae in the Spiral Galaxy NGC 5643 ', The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 895, no. 2, 118 . https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab8e3e, The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2013aa and SN 2017cbv, two nearly identical type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) in the host galaxy NGC 5643. The optical photometry has been obtained using the same telescope and instruments used by the Carnegie Supernova Project. This eliminates most instrumental systematics and provides light curves in a stable and well-understood photometric system. Having the same host galaxy also eliminates systematics due to distance and peculiar velocity, providing an opportunity to directly test the relative precision of SNe Ia as standard candles. The two SNe have nearly identical decline rates, negligible reddening, and remarkably similar spectra and, at a distance of $\sim 20$ Mpc, are ideal as potential calibrators for the absolute distance using primary indicators such as Cepheid variables. We discuss to what extent these two SNe can be considered twins and compare them with other supernova "siblings" in the literature and their likely progenitor scenarios. Using 12 galaxies that hosted 2 or more SNe~Ia, we find that when using SNe~Ia, and after accounting for all sources of observational error, one gets consistency in distance to 3 percent.<br />Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Burns, C R, Ashall, C, Contreras, C, Brown, P, Stritzinger, M, Phillips, M M, Flores, R, Suntzeff, N B, Hsiao, E Y, Uddin, S, Simon, J D, Krisciunas, K, Campillay, A, Foley, R J, Freedman, W L, Galbany, L, González, C, Hoeflich, P, Holmbo, S, Kilpatrick, C D, Kirshner, R P, Morrell, N, Muñoz-Elgueta, N, Piro, A L, Rojas-Bravo, C, Sand, D, Vargas-González, J, Ulloa, N & Vilchez, J A 2020, ' SN 2013aa and SN 2017cbv : Two Sibling Type Ia Supernovae in the Spiral Galaxy NGC 5643 ', The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 895, no. 2, 118 . https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab8e3e, The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c6038e598d7510889ed9a6723492e4d