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Hubble Space Telescope and Ground-Based Observations of the Type Iax Supernovae SN 2005hk and SN 2008A

Authors :
David Branch
David D. Balam
Ryan J. Foley
Melissa L. Graham
Johan P. U. Fynbo
Douglas C. Leonard
Curtis McCully
Saurabh Jha
Jesper Sollerman
Thea N. Steele
Chen Zheng
J. Craig Wheeler
Mohan Ganeshalingam
Joshua A. Frieman
Jeffrey M. Silverman
Peter M. Garnavich
Ryan Chornock
R. C. Thomas
Donald P. Schneider
Lluís Galbany
Alexei V. Filippenko
Jon Holtzman
Weidong Li
Eric Hsiao
Adam G. Riess
Masao Sako
Giorgos Leloudas
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
arXiv, 2013.

Abstract

We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and ground-based optical and near-infrared observations of SN 2005hk and SN 2008A, typical members of the Type Iax class of supernovae (SNe). Here we focus on late-time observations, where these objects deviate most dramatically from all other SN types. Instead of the dominant nebular emission lines that are observed in other SNe at late phases, spectra of SNe 2005hk and 2008A show lines of Fe II, Ca II, and Fe I more than a year past maximum light, along with narrow [Fe II] and [Ca II] emission. We use spectral features to constrain the temperature and density of the ejecta, and find high densities at late times, with n_e >~ 10^9 cm^-3. Such high densities should yield enhanced cooling of the ejecta, making these objects good candidates to observe the expected "infrared catastrophe," a generic feature of SN Ia models. However, our HST photometry of SN 2008A does not match the predictions of an infrared catastrophe. Moreover, our HST observations rule out a "complete deflagration" that fully disrupts the white dwarf for these peculiar SNe, showing no evidence for unburned material at late times. Deflagration explosion models that leave behind a bound remnant can match some of the observed properties of SNe Iax, but no published model is consistent with all of our observations of SNe 2005hk and 2008A.<br />20 pages, 15 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7927c930ed36a6d32a9106101983a6e2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1309.4457