Bibcode
DOI
Ruiz-Lapuente, Pilar; Jeffery, David J.; Challis, Peter M.; Filippenko, Alexei V.; Kirshner, Robert P.; Ho, Luis C.; Schmidt, Brian P.; Sánchez, Francisco; Canal, Ramon
Bibliographical reference
Nature, Volume 365, Issue 6448, pp. 728-730 (1993).
Advertised on:
10
1993
Journal
Citations
72
Refereed citations
65
Description
IN the standard model for type Ia supernovae1, a massive
white dwarf in a binary system accretes matter from the companion star
until it reaches the Chandrasekhar mass (the stability limit for
degenerate-electron stars, corresponding to ~1.4 solar masses), and a
runaway thermonuclear explosion ensues. In a popular variant of this
model2, the companion star is also a white dwarf. But
regardless of the nature of the companion, the invariance of the
Chandrasekhar mass implies that all type Ia supernovae will be similar
in luminosity3, making them ideal 'standard candles' for
determining extragalactic distances, and hence the Hubble constant. In
the context of the standard model, the recent type Ia supernova SN1991bg
is hard to explain: it was underluminous at all observed epochs, leading
to suggestions4,5 that the mass of the progenitor was
unusually low. Here we present model calculations, based on more recent
spectra, which point to a mass of the white dwarf of ~0.7 solar
masses—well below the Chandrasekhar mass. Moreover, the late
spectrum shows evidence of emission from low-velocity hydrogen gas,
which might originate in material stripped from an extended,
hydrogen-rich companion star. If our interpretation is correct, SN1991bg
challenges both the double white-dwarf scenario, and the standard model
for type Ia supernovae.