A year-long plateau in the near-infrared light curves of Type Ia supernovae

This
paper started out as a fishing expedition. For the last few years, I
have observed
Type
Ia supernovae
(SNe
Ia)
with the
Hubble Space Telescope
(HST)
when
they are >500 days past maximum light.
In parallel, Adam
Riess
has been using
HST to calibrate the SN Ia distance ladder by
observing variable stars in nearby SN
host galaxies.
Most of the
SNe
in these galaxies were years old, but some happened to still be visible. Since he knew
about my interest in late-time observations of SNe Ia, he invited me
to see what I could do with one
of the SNe in his data, SN
2017erp. The
data for SN 2017erp would only range between ~200 and 500 days, but
all
of my previous observations were in the optical, so I was curious to
see whether the SN would behave similarly in the near-infrared F160W
(H) filter.
It did not. Instead of declining in brightness, the light curve stayed pretty flat for nearly 300 days. I collected four more SNe Ia from Adam’s various HST programs (Figure 1). One of them - SN 2018gv, observed at similar phases as SN 2017erp - showed the same F160W plateau.

Based
on sparse data, three
previous
studies also noted
hints
of a plateau.
However, each of those SNe had been observed at different phases, and
none of the studies had compared their observations to previous ones.
Luckily,
SNe 2017erp and 2018gv spanned the entire length of the plateau.
Taken together with the other three SNe from our study, and as many
SNe as I could find in the literature, the full story of the plateau
emerged (Figure
2).
SNe Ia transition onto a plateau phase in the near-infrared at ~150
days past maximum. The plateau lasts for nearly a year and, at ~500
days, the SNe fall off the plateau into a second decline phase.

While
discovering the plateau was a fishing expedition, analyzing it
was a collaborative effort. Russell Ryan reduced
an HST spectrum of SN 2017erp at ~600 days that,
when
compared to similar
spectra of the
SN acquired by Kate Maguire, indicated
that the transition off the plateau could be caused by
a change in the ionization state of the SN ejecta (Figure
3).
Matt Nicholl reduced spectra of SN 2014J that showed that the plateau
was not observed in the K band. Arturo Avelino measured the light
curve properties of the SNe in our sample, from which we noticed
correlations between the features of the plateau and the luminosities
of the SNe. And Luke Shingles, Ivo Seitenzahl, and Robert Fisher
provided the theoretical analysis of the plateau, noting that it
could be due to scattering of photons from the UV to longer
wavelengths.

Do all types of SNe Ia exhibit this plateau? Are SNe Ia distributed
along the plateau in a continuous fashion or are there “bright”
and “dim” plateau SNe? Are there other possible explanations for
the existence of the plateau? We hope that these, and many other
questions, will be sparked by our paper.
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