GeminiFocus 2013 Year in Review | Page 24

for the first time and unambiguously showed the subsequent constant velocity (Figure 3). Magnesium is a product of thermonuclear carbon burning and not oxygen burning. At the phase of constant velocity, the magnesium line therefore locates the boundary between carbon and oxygen burning. This boundary is thought to be where the transition from a subsonic to a supersonic burning front occurs, and its location is sensitively controlled by the density under which the transition occurs. If the transition density is the origin of the observed spread in the peak luminosities, it might also drive the luminosity-decline rate relation (Hoeflich et al. 1995). The time-series GNIRS spectra of SN 2011fe shows an extended period of constant velocity for the magnesium feature, beginning at 10 days before maximum light and lasting until the feature disappears at 10 days past maximum light. Therefore, a single spectrum obtained at any phase within this range is sufficient to determine the transition density of a SN Ia. Armed with this insight, we surveyed the near-infrared spectra in the literature and measured their near-infrared magnesium velocity in a consistent manner (Figure 3). Surprisingly, when we plot up the magnesium velocities, as a proxy for the transition densities, against the decline rate of the supernova light curves, there is no correlation. The transition density does not seem to have a strong influence on the peak luminosities. We need to go back to the drawing board and rethink the origin of the observed variation in the peak luminosities. It is likely that the transition density affects the luminosity on a secondary level, which offers the possibility of improving further the standardization of SN Ia luminosities. We are currently investigating the cosmological utility of these velocity measurements. 22 References: Barone-Nugent, R. L., et al., “Near-infrared observations of Type Ia supernovae: the best known standard candle for cosmology,” Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 425: 1007–1012, 2012 Hoeflich, P., et al., “Delayed detonation models for normal and subluminous Type Ia supernovae: absolute brightness, light curves, and molecule formation,” The Astrophysical Journal, 444: 831–847, 1995 Hsiao, E. Y., et al., “The earliest near-infrared time-series spectroscopy of a Type Ia supernova.” Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, arXiv: 1301.6287, 2013 Nugent, P. E., et al., “Sup