2 research outputs found
Late Light Curves of Normal Type Ia Supernovae
We present late-epoch optical photometry (BVRI) of seven
normal/super-luminous Type Ia supernovae: SN 2000E, SN 2000ce, SN 2000cx, SN
2001C, SN 2001V, SN 2001bg, SN 2001dp. The photometry of these objects was
obtained using a template subtraction method to eliminate galaxy light
contamination during aperture photometry. We show the optical light curves of
these supernovae out to epochs of up to ~640 days after the explosion of the
supernova. We show a linear decline in these data during the epoch of 200-500
days after explosion with the decline rate in the B,V,& R bands equal to about
1.4 mag/100 days, but the decline rate of the I-band is much shallower at 0.94
mag/100 days.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astronomical
Journa
Late Light Curves of Normally-Luminous Type Ia Supernovae
The use of Type Ia supernovae as cosmological tools has reinforced the need
to better understand these objects and their light curves. The light curves of
Type Ia supernovae are powered by the nuclear decay of . The late time light curves can provide insight into the behavior of
the decay products and their effect of the shape of the curves. We present the
optical light curves of six "normal" Type Ia supernovae, obtained at late times
with template image subtraction, and the fits of these light curves to
supernova energy deposition models.Comment: Proceedings of Astronomy with Radioactivities V Conferenc