Properties of Type-Ia Supernova Light Curves
Abstract
I show that the characteristic diffusion timescale and the gamma-ray escape timescale, of SN Ia supernova ejecta, are related with each other through the time when the bolometric luminosity, L bol, intersects with instantaneous radioactive decay luminosity, Lγ, for the second time after the light-curve peak. Analytical arguments, numerical radiation-transport calculations, and observational tests show that L bol generally intersects Lγ at roughly 1.7 times the characteristic diffusion timescale of the ejecta. This relation implies that the gamma-ray escape timescale is typically 2.7 times the diffusion timescale, and also implies that the bolometric luminosity 15 days after the peak, L bol(t15), must be close to the instantaneous decay luminosity at that time, Lγ (t15). With the employed calculations and observations, the accuracy of L bol=Lγ at t=t15 is found to be comparable to the simple version of "Arnett's rule" (L bol=Lγ at t=t peak). This relation aids the interpretation of SN Ia supernova light curves and may also be applicable to general hydrogen-free explosion scenarios powered by other central engines.
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