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Supernova Light Curves

Compare the brightness evolution of different supernova types over time

Day: 0
Type Ia (Thermonuclear)
Type II-P (Plateau)
Type II-L (Linear)
Type Ib/c (Stripped)

Type Ia Supernova

Thermonuclear explosion of a white dwarf that accretes mass from a companion. Peak luminosity is remarkably consistent (~10⁹ L☉), making them excellent "standard candles" for measuring cosmic distances.

-19.3
Peak Mag
~20
Days to Peak

Type II-P Supernova

Core collapse of a red supergiant with intact hydrogen envelope. Shows a distinctive "plateau" phase lasting ~100 days as the photosphere recedes through the hydrogen layer.

-17.0
Peak Mag
~100
Plateau Days

Type II-L Supernova

Core collapse with partially stripped hydrogen envelope. Shows linear decline after peak without plateau phase. Less hydrogen than II-P but more than Ib/c types.

-17.5
Peak Mag
~15
Days to Peak

Type Ib/c Supernova

Core collapse of massive stars that lost their outer layers. No hydrogen lines (Ib has helium, Ic lacks both). Associated with long gamma-ray bursts in some cases.

-17.5
Peak Mag
~15
Days to Peak