Normal or transitional? The evolution and properties of two type Ia supernovae in the Virgo cluster

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences (2025)

Authors:

L Izzo, C Gall, N Khetan, N Earl, J Hjorth, WB Hoogendam, YQ Ni, A Sedgewick, SM Ward, Y Zenati, K Auchettl, S Bhattacharjee, S Benetti, M Branchesi, E Cappellaro, A Catapano, KC Chambers, DA Coulter, KW Davis, M Della Valle, S Dhawan, T de Boer, G Dimitriadis, RJ Foley, M Fulton, H Gao, WJ Hon, MEDO Huber Jones, CD Kilpatrick, C Lin, TB Lowe, EA Magnier, KS Mandel, R Margutti, GP Narayan Ochner, YC Pan, A Reguitti, C Rojas-Bravo, M Siebert, SJ Smartt, KW Smith, S Srivastav, J Swift, K Taggart, G Terreran, S Thorp, L Tomasella, RJ Wainscoat

Abstract:

Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are among the most precise cosmological distance indicators used to study the expansion history of the Universe. The vast increase in SN Ia data due to large-scale astrophysical surveys has led to the discovery of a wide variety of SN Ia sub-classes, such as transitional and fast-declining SNe Ia. However, their distinct photometric and spectroscopic properties differentiate them from the population of normal SNe Ia such that their use as cosmological tools remains challenged. Here, we present a high-cadenced photometric and spectroscopic dataset of two SNe Ia, SNe 2020ue and 2020nlb, which were discovered in the nearby Virgo cluster of galaxies. Our study shows that SN 2020nlb is a normal SN Ia whose unusually red colour is intrinsic, arising from a lower photospheric temperature rather than interstellar reddening, providing clear evidence that colour diversity among normal SNe Ia can have a physical origin. In contrast, SN 2020ue has photometric properties, such as colour evolution and light curve decay rate, similar to those of transitional SNe. It is hence more spectroscopically aligned with normal SNe Ia. This is evident from spectroscopic indicators such as the pseudo-equivalent width of lines. Thus, such SNe Ia, which lie photometrically at the edge of the standard normal SNe Ia range, may be missed in cosmological SNe Ia samples. Our results highlight that a spectroscopic analysis of SNe Ia around peak brightness is crucial for identifying intrinsic colour variations and constructing a more complete and physically homogeneous SN Ia sample for precision cosmology. Si II

The critical role of clumping in line-driven disc winds

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 545:3 (2025) staf2183

Authors:

Amin Mosallanezhad, Christian Knigge, Nicolas Scepi, Knox S Long, James H Matthews, Stuart A Sim, Austen Wallis

Abstract:

Radiation pressure on spectral lines is a promising mechanism for powering disc winds from accreting white dwarfs (AWDs) and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). However, in radiation-hydrodynamic simulations, overionization reduces line opacity and quenches the line force, which suppresses outflows. Here, we show that small-scale clumping can resolve this problem. Adopting the microclumping approximation, our new simulations demonstrate that even modest volume filling factors () can dramatically increase the wind mass-loss rate by lowering its ionization state – raising and yielding for such modest filling factors. Clumpy wind models produce the UV resonance lines that are absent from smooth wind models. They can also reprocess a significant fraction of the disc luminosity and thus dramatically modify the broad-band optical/UV SED. Given that theory and observations indicate that disc winds are intrinsically inhomogeneous, clumping offers a physically motivated solution. Together, these results provide the first robust, self-consistent demonstration that clumping can reconcile line-driven wind theory with observations across AWDs and AGNs.

Pan-STARRS Follow-up of the Gravitational-wave Event S250818k and the Light Curve of SN2025ulz

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 995:1 (2025) L27

Authors:

JH Gillanders, ME Huber, M Nicholl, SJ Smartt, KW Smith, KC Chambers, DR Young, JW Tweddle, S Srivastav, MD Fulton, F Stoppa, GSH Paek, A Aamer, MR Alarcon, A Andersson, A Aryan, K Auchettl, T-W Chen, T de Boer, AKH Kong, J Licandro, T Lowe, D Magill, EA Magnier

Abstract:

Kilonovae are the scientifically rich—but observationally elusive—optical transient phenomena associated with compact binary mergers. Only a handful of events have been discovered to date, all through multiwavelength (gamma-ray) and multimessenger (gravitational-wave) signals. Given their scarcity, it is important to maximise the discovery possibility of new kilonova events. To this end, we present our follow-up observations of the gravitational-wave signal S250818k—a plausible binary neutron star merger at a distance of 237 ± 62 Mpc. Pan-STARRS tiled 286 and 318 deg2 (32% and 34% of the 90% sky localisation region) within 3 and 7 days of the GW signal, respectively. ATLAS covered 65% of the sky map within 3 days, but with lower sensitivity. These observations uncovered 47 new transients; however, none were deemed to be linked to S250818k. We undertook an expansive follow-up campaign of AT2025ulz, the purported counterpart to S250818k. The griz-band light curve, combined with our redshift measurement (z = 0.0849 ± 0.0003), all indicate that SN2025ulz is a type IIb supernova and thus not the counterpart to S250818k. We rule out the presence of an AT2017gfo-like kilonova within ≈27% of the distance posterior sampled by our Pan-STARRS pointings (≈9.1% across the total 90% 3D sky localisation). We demonstrate that early observations are optimal for probing the distance posterior of the 3D gravitational-wave sky map, and that SN2025ulz was a plausible kilonova candidate for ≲5 days, before ultimately being ruled out.

MeerKAT observations of white dwarf pulsars

Sissa Medialab Srl (2025) 061

Authors:

Emil Meintjes, PA Woudt, M Geyer, I Heywood, V Prayag, B Stappers, D Ah Buckley, M Caleb, R Fender, I Pelisoli

A MeerKAT view of the parsec-scale jets in the black-hole X-ray binary GRS 1758–258

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 704 (2025) a239

Authors:

I Mariani, SE Motta, P Atri, JH Matthews, RP Fender, J Martí, PL Luque-Escamilla, I Heywood

Abstract:

Context. Jets from accreting black-hole (BH) X-ray binary (XRB) systems are powerful outflows that release a large fraction of the accretion energy to the surrounding environment, providing a feedback mechanism that may alter the properties of the interstellar medium (ISM). Studying accretion processes alongside their feedback on the environment may enable one to estimate the matter and energy input and output around accreting BHs. Aims. We aim to study the extended jet structures around the BH XRB GRS 1758–258. First observed in VLA data, these parsec-scale jet structures originate from jet-ISM interaction, and are characterised by a peculiar Z-shape morphology. Methods. Using the MeerKAT radio telescope we observed GRS 1758–258 in the L band for a total exposure of 7 hr. Following a calorimetry-based method originally proposed for active galactic nuclei (AGN) and later applied to X-ray binaries, we estimated the properties of the jets and of the surrounding ISM. Results. We detect a jet and a counter-jet terminating in bow-shock structures induced by their interaction with the ISM. We identified both synchrotron and bremsstrahlung emitting regions within the northern lobe, while the southern lobe is dominated by thermal emission. We measured an ISM particle density of between 10 and 40 cm −3 across both the northern and southern jets, slightly lower in the northern region. The estimated ages of the two jet sides range from 6 to 51 kyr, with the northern jet seemingly younger than the southern one. The time-averaged transferred jet energy for both jets falls between 4.4 × 10 33 and 3.3 × 10 36 erg s −1 , with slight differences between the northern and southern jets ascribed to different local environmental conditions. Comparing the new MeerKAT with archival VLA observations, we measured a proper motion of a portion of the northern jet of ∼130 mas/year. Conclusions. Jet-ISM interaction structures on both sides of GRS 1758–258 reveal different local ISM properties. The comparison between the morphology of these structures and those from other XRBs indicates that the lobes in GRS 1758–258 may be younger and may result from a number of jet activity phases. The estimated time-averaged energy transferred to the environment is slightly lower than, but comparable to, that observed in other XRBs, consistent with the younger age of the lobes in GRS 1758–258 relative to those of other systems.