Type Ia Supernova Rate Measurements to Redshift 2.5 from CANDELS : Searching for Prompt Explosions in the Early Universe
astro-ph.CO
/ Authors
Steven A. Rodney, Adam G. Riess, Louis-Gregory Strolger, Tomas Dahlen, Or Graur, Stefano Casertano, Mark E. Dickinson, Henry C. Ferguson, Peter Garnavich, Brian Hayden
and 28 more authors
Saurabh W. Jha, David O. Jones, Robert P. Kirshner, Anton M. Koekemoer, Curtis McCully, Bahram Mobasher, Brandon Patel, Benjamin J. Weiner, S. Bradley Cenko, Kelsey I. Clubb, Michael Cooper, Alexei V. Filippenko, Teddy F. Frederiksen, Jens Hjorth, Bruno Leibundgut, Thomas Matheson, Hooshang Nayyeri, Kyle Penner, Jonathan Trump, Jeffrey M. Silverman, Vivian U, K. Azalee Bostroem
/ 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 deg^2 with ~900 HST orbits spread across 5 fields over 3 years. Within these survey images we discovered 65 supernovae (SN) of all types, out to z~2.5. We classify ~24 of these as Type Ia SN (SN Ia) based on host-galaxy redshifts and SN photometry (supplemented by grism spectroscopy of 6 SN). 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 SN 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 SN 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 fP=0.53 +0.09 -0.10 (stat) +0.10 -0.26 (sys), consistent with a delay time distribution that follows a simple t^{-1} power law for all times t>40 Myr. However, a 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, we find a low rate of SN 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.