TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of Positronium on the γ-Ray Spectra and Energy Deposition in Type Ia Supernovae
AU - Dutta, Anirban
AU - Fullard, Andrew
AU - Kerzendorf, Wolfgang
AU - O'Brien, J. T.
AU - Powers, Cecelia
AU - Sim, Stuart A
AU - Flörs, Andreas
AU - Graur, Or
N1 - Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. Comments welcome!
PY - 2025/9/3
Y1 - 2025/9/3
N2 - Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are powered by the radioactive decay of isotopes such as 56Ni and 56Co, making their γ-ray spectra useful probes of the explosion mechanism and ejecta structure. Accurate interpretation of γ-ray observables, including line ratios and continuum fluxes, requires a detailed understanding of the microphysical processes that shape the spectra. One such process is positronium formation during electron–positron annihilation, which can redistribute flux from the 511 keV line into the surrounding continuum. To assess the impact of positronium on the emergent spectra, we developed a new open-source module, tardis-He, for time-dependent three-dimensional γ-ray transport, integrated into the radiative transfer code tardis. The code simulates γ-ray spectra and light curves from one-dimensional supernova ejecta models and allows for flexible incorporation of decay chains and opacity treatments. Using tardis-He, we explore the effect of positronium formation by varying the positronium fraction from 0% to 100%, and assuming an extreme case where 75% of positronium decays result in three-photon emission. We find that full positronium formation can reduce the 511 keV line flux by ≈70% and modestly enhance energy deposition by up to 2% at around 100 days postexplosion, compared to models without positronium. These results demonstrate that, while the effect is not dominant, positronium formation introduces measurable changes to γ-ray observables. Future observations with missions such as the Compton Spectrometer and Imager may offer constraints on positronium formation in SNe Ia and help refine models of their radioactive energy transport.
AB - Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are powered by the radioactive decay of isotopes such as 56Ni and 56Co, making their γ-ray spectra useful probes of the explosion mechanism and ejecta structure. Accurate interpretation of γ-ray observables, including line ratios and continuum fluxes, requires a detailed understanding of the microphysical processes that shape the spectra. One such process is positronium formation during electron–positron annihilation, which can redistribute flux from the 511 keV line into the surrounding continuum. To assess the impact of positronium on the emergent spectra, we developed a new open-source module, tardis-He, for time-dependent three-dimensional γ-ray transport, integrated into the radiative transfer code tardis. The code simulates γ-ray spectra and light curves from one-dimensional supernova ejecta models and allows for flexible incorporation of decay chains and opacity treatments. Using tardis-He, we explore the effect of positronium formation by varying the positronium fraction from 0% to 100%, and assuming an extreme case where 75% of positronium decays result in three-photon emission. We find that full positronium formation can reduce the 511 keV line flux by ≈70% and modestly enhance energy deposition by up to 2% at around 100 days postexplosion, compared to models without positronium. These results demonstrate that, while the effect is not dominant, positronium formation introduces measurable changes to γ-ray observables. Future observations with missions such as the Compton Spectrometer and Imager may offer constraints on positronium formation in SNe Ia and help refine models of their radioactive energy transport.
KW - astro-ph.HE
KW - UKRI
KW - STFC
KW - ST/X00094X/1
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ade880
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ade880
M3 - Article
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 990
JO - The Astrophysical Journal
JF - The Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 129
ER -