The Origin and Evolution of the Normal Type Ia SN 2018aoz with Infant-phase Reddening and Excess Emission

Ni, Yuan Qi; Moon, Dae-Sik; Drout, Maria R.; Polin, Abigail; Sand, David J.; Gonzalez-Gaitan, Santiago; Kim, Sang Chul; Lee, Youngdae; Park, Hong Soo; Howell, D. Andrew; Nugent, Peter E.; Piro, Anthony L.; Brown, Peter J.; Galbany, Lluis; Burke, Jamison; Hiramatsu, Daichi; Hosseinzadeh, Griffin; Valenti, Stefano; Afsariardchi, Niloufar; Andrews, Jennifer E.; Antoniadis, John; Beaton, Rachael L.; Bostroem, K. Azalee; Carlberg, Raymond G.; Cenko, S. Bradley; Cha, Sang-Mok; Dong, Yize; Gal-Yam, Avishay; Haislip, Joshua; Holoien, Thomas W. -S.; Johnson, Sean D.; Kouprianov, Vladimir; Lee, Yongseok; Matzner, Christopher D.; Morrell, Nidia; McCully, Curtis; Pignata, Giuliano; Reichart, Daniel E.; Rich, Jeffrey; Ryder, Stuart D.; Smith, Nathan; Wyatt, Samuel; Yang, Sheng
2023
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/aca9be
SN 2018aoz is a Type Ia SN with a B-band plateau and excess emission in infant-phase light curves ?1 day after the first light, evidencing an over-density of surface iron-peak elements as shown in our previous study. Here, we advance the constraints on the nature and origin of SN 2018aoz based on its evolution until the nebular phase. Near-peak spectroscopic features show that the SN is intermediate between two subtypes of normal Type Ia: core normal and broad line. The excess emission may be attributable to the radioactive decay of surface iron-peak elements as well as the interaction of ejecta with either the binary companion or a small torus of circumstellar material. Nebular-phase limits on Ha and He i favor a white dwarf companion, consistent with the small companion size constrained by the low early SN luminosity, while the absence of [O i] and He i disfavors a violent merger of the progenitor. Of the two main explosion mechanisms proposed to explain the distribution of surface iron-peak elements in SN 2018aoz, the asymmetric Chandrasekhar-mass explosion is less consistent with the progenitor constraints and the observed blueshifts of nebular-phase [Fe ii] and [Ni ii]. The helium-shell double-detonation explosion is compatible with the observed lack of C spectral features, but current 1D models are incompatible with the infant-phase excess emission, Bmax-Vmax