239 research outputs found
Constraints On The Delayed Transition to Detonation in Type Ia Supernovae
We investigate the possibility of a delayed detonation in a type Ia supernova
under the assumption that the transition to detonation is triggered by
turbulence only. Our discussion is based on the Zeldovich mechanism and
suggests that typical turbulent velocities present during the explosion are not
strong enough to allow this transition to occur. Although we are able to show
that in carbon-rich matter (e.g., C) the possibility of a
deflagration to detonation transition (DDT) is enhanced, even in this case the
turbulent velocities needed are larger than the expected value of on a length-scale of cm. Thus we
conclude that a DDT may not be a common event during a thermonuclear explosion
of a Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarf.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Ap
Quantitative spectral analysis of the sdB star HD 188112: a helium-core white dwarf progenitor
HD 188112 is a bright (V = 10.2 mag) hot subdwarf B (sdB) star with a mass
too low to ignite core helium burning and is therefore considered as a
pre-extremely low mass (ELM) white dwarf (WD). ELM WDs (M 0.3 Msun) are
He-core objects produced by the evolution of compact binary systems. We present
in this paper a detailed abundance analysis of HD 188112 based on
high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) near and far-ultraviolet
spectroscopy. We also constrain the mass of the star's companion. We use hybrid
non-LTE model atmospheres to fit the observed spectral lines and derive the
abundances of more than a dozen elements as well as the rotational broadening
of metallic lines. We confirm the previous binary system parameters by
combining radial velocities measured in our UV spectra with the already
published ones. The system has a period of 0.60658584 days and a WD companion
with M 0.70 Msun. By assuming a tidally locked rotation, combined with
the projected rotational velocity (v sin i = 7.9 0.3 km s) we
constrain the companion mass to be between 0.9 and 1.3 Msun. We further discuss
the future evolution of the system as a potential progenitor of a
(underluminous) type Ia supernova. We measure abundances for Mg, Al, Si, P, S,
Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, and Zn, as well as for the trans-iron elements Ga, Sn,
and Pb. In addition, we derive upper limits for the C, N, O elements and find
HD 188112 to be strongly depleted in carbon. We find evidence of non-LTE
effects on the line strength of some ionic species such as Si II and Ni II. The
metallic abundances indicate that the star is metal-poor, with an abundance
pattern most likely produced by diffusion effects.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Nucleosynthesis in Massive Stars With Improved Nuclear and Stellar Physics
We present the first calculations to follow the evolution of all stable
nuclei and their radioactive progenitors in stellar models computed from the
onset of central hydrogen burning through explosion as Type II supernovae.
Calculations are performed for Pop I stars of 15, 19, 20, 21, and 25 M_sun
using the most recently available experimental and theoretical nuclear data,
revised opacity tables, neutrino losses, and weak interaction rates, and taking
into account mass loss due to stellar winds. A novel ``adaptive'' reaction
network is employed with a variable number of nuclei (adjusted each time step)
ranging from about 700 on the main sequence to more than 2200 during the
explosion. The network includes, at any given time, all relevant isotopes from
hydrogen through polonium (Z=84). Even the limited grid of stellar masses
studied suggests that overall good agreement can be achieved with the solar
abundances of nuclei between 16O and 90Zr. Interesting discrepancies are seen
in the 20 M_sun model and, so far, only in that model, that are a consequence
of the merging of the oxygen, neon, and carbon shells about a day prior to core
collapse. We find that, in some stars, most of the ``p-process'' nuclei can be
produced in the convective oxygen burning shell moments prior to collapse; in
others, they are made only in the explosion. Serious deficiencies still exist
in all cases for the p-process isotopes of Ru and Mo.Comment: 53 pages, 17 color figures (3 as separate GIF images), slightly
extended discussion and references, accepted by Ap
On the small-scale stability of thermonuclear flames in Type Ia supernovae
We present a numerical model which allows us to investigate thermonuclear
flames in Type Ia supernova explosions. The model is based on a finite-volume
explicit hydrodynamics solver employing PPM. Using the level-set technique
combined with in-cell reconstruction and flux-splitting schemes we are able to
describe the flame in the discontinuity approximation. We apply our
implementation to flame propagation in Chandrasekhar-mass Type Ia supernova
models. In particular we concentrate on intermediate scales between the flame
width and the Gibson-scale, where the burning front is subject to the
Landau-Darrieus instability. We are able to reproduce the theoretical
prediction on the growth rates of perturbations in the linear regime and
observe the stabilization of the flame in a cellular shape. The increase of the
mean burning velocity due to the enlarged flame surface is measured. Results of
our simulation are in agreement with semianalytical studies.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, Uses AASTEX, emulateapj5.sty, onecolfloat.sty.
Replaced with accepted version (ApJ), Figures 1 and 3 are ne
Ultraviolet Diversity of Type Ia Supernovae
Ultraviolet (UV) observations of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) probe the
outermost layers of the explosion, and UV spectra of SNe Ia are expected to be
extremely sensitive to differences in progenitor composition and the details of
the explosion. Here we present the first study of a sample of high
signal-to-noise ratio SN Ia spectra that extend blueward of 2900 A. We focus on
spectra taken within 5 days of maximum brightness. Our sample of ten SNe Ia
spans the majority of the parameter space of SN Ia optical diversity. We find
that SNe Ia have significantly more diversity in the UV than in the optical,
with the spectral variance continuing to increase with decreasing wavelengths
until at least 1800 A (the limit of our data). The majority of the UV variance
correlates with optical light-curve shape, while there are no obvious and
unique correlations between spectral shape and either ejecta velocity or
host-galaxy morphology. Using light-curve shape as the primary variable, we
create a UV spectral model for SNe Ia at peak brightness. With the model, we
can examine how individual SNe vary relative to expectations based on only
their light-curve shape. Doing this, we confirm an excess of flux for SN 2011fe
at short wavelengths, consistent with its progenitor having a subsolar
metallicity. While most other SNe Ia do not show large deviations from the
model, ASASSN-14lp has a deficit of flux at short wavelengths, suggesting that
its progenitor was relatively metal rich.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
Supernovae - Optical Precursors of Short Gamma-Ray Bursts
The probability of observing "supernova - gamma-ray burst" (GRB) pair events
and recurrent GRBs from one galaxy in a time interval of several years has been
estimated. Supernova explosions in binary systems accompanied by the formation
of a short-lived pair of compact objects can be the sources of such events. If
a short GRB is generated during the collision of a pair, then approximately
each of ~300 short GRBs with redshift z must have an optical precursor - a
supernova in the observer's time interval <2(1+z)yr. If the supernova explosion
has the pattern of a hypernova, then a successive observation of long and short
GRBs is possible. The scenario for the generation of multiple GRBs in
collapsing galactic nuclei is also discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure; this paper has the e-precursor arXiv:1101.3298
[astro-ph.HE
SN 2002cv: A Heavily Obscured Type Ia Supernova
We present VRIJHK photometry, and optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, of
the heavily extinguished Type Ia supernova (SN) 2002cv, located in NGC 3190,
which is also the parent galaxy of the Type Ia SN 2002bo. SN 2002cv, not
visible in the blue, has a total visual extinction of 8.74 +- 0.21 mag. In
spite of this we were able to obtain the light curves between -10 and +207 days
from the maximum in the I band, and also to follow the spectral evolution,
deriving its key parameters. We found the peak I-band brightness to be Imax =
16.57 +- 0.10 mag, the maximum absolute I magnitude to be MmaxI = -18.79 +-
0.20, and the parameter dm15(B) specifying the width of the B-band light curve
to be 1.46 +- 0.17 mag. The latter was derived using the relations between this
parameter and dm40(I) and the time interval dtmax(I) between the two maxima in
the I-band light curve. As has been found for previously observed, highly
extinguished SNe Ia, a small value of 1.59 +- 0.07 was obtained here for the
ratio Rv of the total-to-selective extinction ratio for SN 2002cv, which
implies a small mean size for the grains along the line of sight toward us.
Since it was found for SN 2002bo a canonical value of 3.1, here we present a
clear evidence of different dust properties inside NGC 3190.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Added
co-author
Magnetically-driven explosions of rapidly-rotating white dwarfs following Accretion-Induced Collapse
We present 2D multi-group flux-limited diffusion magnetohydrodynamics (MHD)
simulations of the Accretion-Induced Collapse (AIC) of a rapidly-rotating white
dwarf. We focus on the dynamical role of MHD processes after the formation of a
millisecond-period protoneutron star. We find that including magnetic fields
and stresses can lead to a powerful explosion with an energy of a few Bethe,
rather than a weak one of at most 0.1 Bethe, with an associated ejecta mass of
~0.1Msun, instead of a few 0.001Msun. The core is spun down by ~30% within
500ms after bounce, and the rotational energy extracted from the core is
channeled into magnetic energy that generates a strong magnetically-driven
wind, rather than a weak neutrino-driven wind. Baryon loading of the ejecta,
while this wind prevails, precludes it from becoming relativistic. This
suggests that a GRB is not expected to emerge from such AICs during the early
protoneutron star phase, except in the unlikely event that the massive white
dwarf has sufficient mass to lead to black hole formation. In addition, we
predict both negligible 56Ni-production (that should result in an
optically-dark, adiabatically-cooled explosion) and the ejection of 0.1Msun of
material with an electron fraction of 0.1-0.2. Such pollution by neutron-rich
nuclei puts strong constraints on the possible rate of such AICs. Moreover,
being free from ``fallback,'' such highly-magnetized millisecond-period
protoneutron stars may later become magnetars, and the magnetically-driven
winds may later transition to Poynting-flux-dominated, relativistic winds,
eventually detectable as GRBs at cosmological distances. However, the low
expected event rate of AICs will constrain them to be, at best, a small subset
of GRB and/or magnetar progenitors.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, paper accepted to ApJ; High resolution version
available at http://hermes.as.arizona.edu/~luc/aic_mhd/aic_mhd.htm
High-Velocity Features: a ubiquitous property of Type Ia SNe
Evidence of high-velocity features such as those seen in the near-maximum
spectra of some Type Ia Supernovae (eg SN 2000cx) has been searched for in the
available SNIa spectra observed earlier than one week before B maximum. Recent
observational efforts have doubled the number of SNeIa with very early spectra.
Remarkably, all SNeIa with early data (7 in our RTN sample and 10 from other
programmes) show signs of such features, to a greater or lesser degree, in CaII
IR, and some also in SiII 6255A line. High-velocity features may be interpreted
as abundance or density enhancements. Abundance enhancements would imply an
outer region dominated by Si and Ca. Density enhancements may result from the
sweeping up of circumstellar material by the highest velocity SN ejecta. In
this scenario, the high incidence of HVFs suggests that a thick disc and/or a
high-density companion wind surrounds the exploding white dwarf, as may be the
case in Single Degenerate systems. Large-scale angular fluctuations in the
radial density and abundance distribution may also be responsible: this could
originate in the explosion, and would suggest a deflagration as the more likely
explosion mechanism. CSM-interaction and surface fluctuations may coexist,
possibly leaving different signatures on the spectrum. In some SNe the HVFs are
narrowly confined in velocity, suggesting the ejection of blobs of burned
material.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, ApJ Letters in pres
The early spectral evolution of SN 2004dt
Aims. We study the optical spectroscopic properties of Type Ia Supernova (SN
Ia) 2004dt, focusing our attention on the early epochs.
Methods. Observation triggered soon after the SN 2004dt discovery allowed us
to obtain a spectrophotometric coverage from day -10 to almost one year (~353
days) after the B band maximum. Observations carried out on an almost daily
basis allowed us a good sampling of the fast spectroscopic evolution of SN
2004dt in the early stages. To obtain this result, low-resolution, long-slit
spectroscopy was obtained using a number of facilities.
Results. This supernova, which in some absorption lines of its early spectra
showed the highest degree of polarization ever measured in any SN Ia, has a
complex velocity structure in the outer layers of its ejecta. Unburnt oxygen is
present, moving at velocities as high as ~16,700 km/s, with some
intermediate-mass elements (Mg, Si, Ca) moving equally fast. Modeling of the
spectra based on standard density profiles of the ejecta fails to reproduce the
observed features, whereas enhancing the density of outer layers significantly
improves the fit. Our analysis indicates the presence of clumps of
high-velocity, intermediate-mass elements in the outermost layers, which is
also suggested by the spectropolarimetric data.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, accepted for pubblication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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