The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

Origin of High-velocity Ejecta, Excess Emission, and Redward Color Evolution in the Infant Type Ia Supernova 2021aefx

  • Yuan Qi Ni,
  • Dae-Sik Moon,
  • Maria R. Drout,
  • Christopher D. Matzner,
  • Kelvin C. C. Leong,
  • Sang Chul Kim,
  • Hong Soo Park,
  • Youngdae Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad0640
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 959, no. 2
p. 132

Abstract

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SN 2021aefx is a normal Type Ia supernova (SN) showing excess emission and redward color evolution over the first ∼ 2 days. We present analyses of this SN using our high-cadence KMTNet multiband photometry, spectroscopy, and publicly available data, including first measurements of its explosion epoch (MJD 59529.32 ± 0.16) and onset of power-law rise ( t _PL = MJD 59529.85 ± 0.55; often called first light ) associated with the main ejecta ^56 Ni distribution. The first KMTNet detection of SN 2021aefx precedes t _PL by ∼ 0.5 hr, indicating presence of additional power sources. Our peak-spectrum confirms its intermediate Type Ia subclassification between core-normal and broad-Line, and we estimate an ejecta mass of ∼ 1.34 M _⊙ . The spectral evolution identifies material reaching >40,000 km s ^−1 (fastest ever observed in Type Ia SNe) and at least two split-velocity ejecta components expanding homologously: (1) a normal-velocity (∼ 12,400 km s ^−1 ) component consistent with typical photospheric evolution of near-Chandrasekhar-mass ejecta; and (2) a high-velocity (∼ 23,500 km s ^−1 ) secondary component visible during the first ∼ 3.6 days post-explosion, which locates the component within the outer <16% of the ejecta mass. Asymmetric subsonic explosion processes producing a nonspherical secondary photosphere provide an explanation for the simultaneous appearance of the two components, and may also explain the excess emission via a slight ^56 Ni enrichment in the outer ∼ 0.5% of the ejecta mass. Our 300 days post-peak nebular-phase spectrum advances constraints against nondegenerate companions and further supports a near-Chandrasekhar-mass explosion origin. Off-center ignited delayed-detonations are likely responsible for the observed features of SN 2021aefx in some normal Type Ia SNe.

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