Strengthening the case for the dark energy! Type Ia supernova are after all uniform - Keiichi Maeda -

July 1, 2010
Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (IPMU)

An international collaboration of researchers led by Keiichi Maeda, an assistant professor at the Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (IPMU), the University of Tokyo, has solved a mystery regarding type Ia supernovae. Type Ia supernovae form a homogeneous class of stellar explosions and are used as “standard candles” to study the acceleration of the Universe. However, it has long been known that type Ia supernovae that otherwise look like twins can show diverse spectral features, questioning their accuracy as standard candles. The research group argues that type Ia supernovae explode asymmetrically, and that the different spectral appearance is merely a consequence of the random directions from which an SN is observed. This result is good news for cosmology - it suggests that the spectral diversity is no longer a major concern in using type Ia supernovae as cosmological standard candles (Nature, 1 July 2010 issue).

Publication:Nature 2010 July 1 issue
Title:An asymmetric explosion as the origin of spectral evolution diversity in type Ⅰa supernovae
Authors:K. Maeda (IPMU), S. Benetti (Padova Obs.), M. Stritzinger (Las Campanas Obs.), F.K. Ropke (MPA), G. Folatelli (U. Chile), J. Sollerman (U. Stockholm), S. Taubenberger (MPA), K. Nomoto (IPMU), G. Leloudas (U. Copenhagen), M. Hamuy (U. Chile), M. Tanaka (IPMU), P.A.Mazzali (Pisa), N. Elias-Rosa (Cal-Tech)


CONTACTS

For more details

  • Keiichi Maeda,

IPMU Assistant Professor

e-mail. keiichi.maeda _at_ ipmu.jp

Media Contact

  • Fusae Miyazoe,

IPMU Press Officer

e-mail. press _at_ ipmu.jp


SUMMARY

Type Ia supernovae have been playing a key role in cosmology and in the discovery of the Dark Energy, since they can be used to measure distances across the Universe. This relies on the well-developed relation between their brightness and the decline-rates – brighter supernovae decline slower. 

This single parameter description of type Ia supernovae may well reflect the uniform nature of the progenitor system. Type Ia supernovae are explosions of a white dwarf consisting of carbon and oxygen. The explosion is triggered by sparks of thermonuclear flames ignited in the innermost part of the white dwarf, although how the explosion is initiated is still in debate. The explosion most likely takes place when the white dwarf reaches the so-called Chandrasekhar mass (about 1.4 times the Sun) through accreting materials from its binary companion or by merging with another white dwarf.  

However, recent investigations have revealed that the true nature of type Ia supernovae is far more complicated. They indeed do not look like a uniform system in their spectral features – type Ia supernovae that look like twins concerning their luminosity evolution can demonstrate a quite different behavior in the speed with which their spectral features evolve (the so-called velocity gradient). This spectral evolution diversity was first noticed in the late 80’s, and quantified beyond the doubt in 2005. The origin of this diversity has not been clarified, raising a couple of concerns – Are they really good standard candles? Are they indeed from a uniform progenitor system? 

In their new paper published in Nature (1 July 2010 issue), the research group led by Keiichi Maeda (also including Ken’ichi Nomoto, and Masaomi Tanaka of IPMU) has reported that they have finally identified the origin of the diversity. They have found that the velocity gradient is closely related to another independent observed quantity, namely the wavelength shift of emission lines in late-time spectra of type Ia supernovae taken about > 200 days after the explosion (Fig. 1). This late-time emission-line shift has a straightforward interpretation that the shift can arise only if the innermost part of supernovae is asymmetric and the degree of the shift depends on the direction from which a SN is observed. Now the origin of the spectral evolution diversity must be the same – it is merely a consequence of the random directions from which an SN is viewed (Figs. 2 and Figs.3). 

“This is a single stone to kill at least three birds”, explains Keiichi Maeda, the first author of the paper. “It is not only about uncovering the origin of the spectral diversity.  The finding now gets rid of a concern about using type Ia supernovae for cosmology, since this viewing angle effect will average out if we collect many supernovae for cosmology. In addition, the idea of the uniform progenitor system is rescued. Finally, this is the first strong observational indication about how the thermonuclear flames are ignited in the explosion-the finding points to asymmetric, off-centre explosions, as opposed to what most people had believed so far.” “It was amazing to see that the mystery of the supernova spectral diversity was immediately solved when we found this new correlation”, says Stefano Benetti in the team from Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova, Italy, who in 2005 pointed out the problem that the spectral diversity is not correlated with the supernovae luminosities. “I first ran into this mystery already in 1989 while working on my master thesis”. “This is a major step forward in the supernovae cosmology”, mentions Keiichi Maeda, “We have obtained the good insight into properties of type Ia supernovae, which is necessary if we are to aim at the more accurate cosmological measurements.”


FIGURE 1

 (a) The relation between the velocity gradient (vertical axis, measuring the speed of spectral evolution) and the late-time emission velocity shift (horizontal axis, in which the wavelength shift is converted to the velocity shift). These two independent quantities have turned out to be correlated, strongly indicating that these diversities have the same physical origin. (b, c) The number of SNe Ia as a function of (b) the velocity gradient, and (c) the late-time emission shift.  


  

FIGURE 2

 A schematic picture of structure of type Ia supernovae derived by the observations. The ash of the initial sparks is at an offset (yellow). Depending on the viewing direction from which a supernova is observed, a supernova manifests different spectral properties: If viewed from the offset direction, it appears as a “Low-Velocity-Gradient” SN and shows blueshift in late-times. From the opposite direction, a SN is a “High-Velocity-Gradient” SN and shows redshift (as is shown in the observational data in Fig. 1). Here, low- and high-velocity-gradients SNe are those showing a slow and rapid evolution in spectral features, respectively.  


  

FIGURE 3

A cross-section of the density distribution in a modern computer simulation, in which the thermonuclear sparks are ignited at an offset from the center of a white dwarf. The model does show basic features required by the new observational findings as illustrated in Fig. 2. 


REFERENCES