On the Spectroscopic Boundaries Between Normal and Peculiar Type~I Supernovae

Abstract

The spectrum of a supernova is a summation of numerous overlapping atomic line signatures. Consequently, empirical measurements are limited in application when compound features are assumed to be due to one or two spectral lines. Here I address matters of spectroscopic boundaries between normal and peculiar type I supernovae using multi-component empirical metrics. I discuss some obstacles faced when using supernova spectra to pair model with data and I demonstrate how spectrum synthesis can benefit from fairly complete observational coverage in wavelength and time.

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