Abstract

The Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) was a multi-cycle treasury program on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) that surveyed a total area of ∼0.25 deg2 with ∼900 HST orbits spread across five fields over three years. Within these survey images we discovered 65 supernovae (SNe) of all types, out to z ∼ 2.5. We classify ∼24 of these as Type Ia SNe (SNe Ia) based on host galaxy redshifts and SN photometry (supplemented by grism spectroscopy of six SNe). Here we present a measurement of the volumetric SN Ia rate as a function of redshift, reaching for the first time beyond z = 2 and putting new constraints on SN Ia progenitor models. Our highest redshift bin includes detections of SNe that exploded when the universe was only ∼3 Gyr old and near the peak of the cosmic star formation history. This gives the CANDELS high redshift sample unique leverage for evaluating the fraction of SNe Ia that explode promptly after formation (<500 Myr). Combining the CANDELS rates with all available SN Ia rate measurements in the literature we find that this prompt SN Ia fraction is , consistent with a delay time distribution that follows a simple t−1 power law for all times t > 40 Myr. However, mild tension is apparent between ground-based low-z surveys and space-based high-z surveys. In both CANDELS and the sister HST program CLASH (Cluster Lensing And Supernova Survey with Hubble), we find a low rate of SNe Ia at z > 1. This could be a hint that prompt progenitors are in fact relatively rare, accounting for only 20% of all SN Ia explosions—though further analysis and larger samples will be needed to examine that suggestion.

Highlights

  • The prevailing model for a Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) progenitor system begins with a binary system in which the primary star evolves to become a white dwarf (WD)

  • We have presented a sample of 65 SNe from the five Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) fields

  • This sample, collected in concert with the Cluster Lensing and Supernovae search with Hubble (CLASH) SN search, is the first to extend SN Ia detections beyond z = 2, and the first to detect SNe at z ∼ 1.5 in rest-frame optical bands

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The prevailing model for a Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) progenitor system begins with a binary system in which the primary star evolves to become a white dwarf (WD). The Cluster Supernova Survey (CSS) of the Supernova Cosmology Project used HST+ACS to measure the volumetric SN Ia rate (Barbary et al 2012) These data revealed a similar peak and decline, with even larger uncertainty in the high-z bins. This SN survey is a joint operation of two HST Multi-Cycle Treasury (MCT) programs: the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS; PIs: Faber and Ferguson; Grogin et al 2011; Koekemoer et al 2011), and the Cluster Lensing and Supernovae search with Hubble (CLASH; PI: Postman; Postman et al 2012).

THE CANDELS SN SURVEY
Data Processing Pipeline
SN Discovery
Follow-up Observations
DETECTION EFFICIENCY
Missing SNe in Galaxy Cores
CLASSIFICATION
The STARDUST Classifier
The Class Prior
Host AV Distribution
SNe Ia
STARDUST Validation Test
HOST GALAXIES
Morphology and SED Type
GRISM SPECTROSCOPY
Binned 60 Arest
THE VOLUMETRIC SN
Systematic Uncertainties
TESTING SN
Comparison to Earlier Rate Measurements
Isolating the Prompt SN Ia Fraction
DTD Model Fitting Results
Interpretation and Speculation
SUMMARY
Combining galsnid and STARDUST
27 MJD : 56310
28 MJD : 55530
Findings
25 MJD : 56430 56460 56490 56520 56550 56580
Full Text
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