The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

JWST Spectroscopy of SN H0pe: Classification and Time Delays of a Triply Imaged Type Ia Supernova at z = 1.78

  • Wenlei Chen,
  • Patrick L. Kelly,
  • Brenda L. Frye,
  • Justin Pierel,
  • S. P. Willner,
  • Massimo Pascale,
  • Seth H. Cohen,
  • Christopher J. Conselice,
  • Michael Engesser,
  • Lukas J. Furtak,
  • Daniel Gilman,
  • Norman A. Grogin,
  • Simon Huber,
  • Saurabh W. Jha,
  • Joel Johansson,
  • Anton M. Koekemoer,
  • Conor Larison,
  • Ashish K. Meena,
  • Matthew R. Siebert,
  • Rogier A. Windhorst,
  • Haojing Yan,
  • Adi Zitrin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad50a5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 970, no. 2
p. 102

Abstract

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SN H0pe is a triply imaged supernova (SN) at redshift z = 1.78 discovered using the James Webb Space Telescope. In order to classify the SN spectroscopically and measure the relative time delays of its three images (designated A, B, and C), we acquired NIRSpec follow-up spectroscopy spanning 0.6–5 μ m. From the high signal-to-noise spectra of the two bright images B and C, we first classify the SN, whose spectra most closely match those of SN 1994D and SN 2013dy, as a Type Ia SN. We identify prominent blueshifted absorption features corresponding to Si ii λ 6355 and Ca ii H λ 3970 and K λ 3935. We next measure the absolute phases of the three images from our spectra, which allow us to constrain their relative time delays. The absolute phases of the three images, determined by fitting the three spectra to Hsiao07 SN templates, are ${6.5}_{-1.8}^{+2.4}$ days, ${24.3}_{-3.9}^{+3.9}$ days, and ${50.6}_{-15.3}^{+16.1}$ days for the brightest to faintest images. These correspond to relative time delays between Image A and Image B and between Image B and Image C of $-{122.3}_{-43.8}^{+43.7}$ days and ${49.3}_{-14.7}^{+12.2}$ days, respectively. The SALT3-NIR model yields phases and time delays consistent with these values. After unblinding, we additionally explored the effect of using Hsiao07 template spectra for simulations through 80 days instead of 60 days past maximum, and found a small (11.5 and 1.0 days, respectively) yet statistically insignificant (∼0.25 σ and ∼0.1 σ ) effect on the inferred image delays.

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