129 research outputs found
PTF 11kx: A Type Ia Supernova with a Symbiotic Nova Progenitor
There is a consensus that type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) arise from the thermonuclear explosion of white dwarf stars that accrete matter from a binary companion. However, direct observation of SN Ia progenitors is lacking, and the precise nature of the binary companion remains uncertain. A temporal series of high-resolution optical spectra of the SN Ia PTF 11kx reveals a complex circumstellar environment that provides an unprecedentedly detailed view of the progenitor system. Multiple shells of circumstellar material are detected, and the SN ejecta are seen to interact with circumstellar material starting 59 days after the explosion. These features are best described by a symbiotic nova progenitor, similar to RS Ophiuchi
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Search Algorithm and Follow-up Observations
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey has identified a large
number of new transient sources in a 300 sq. deg. region along the celestial
equator during its first two seasons of a three-season campaign. Multi-band
(ugriz) light curves were measured for most of the sources, which include solar
system objects, Galactic variable stars, active galactic nuclei, supernovae
(SNe), and other astronomical transients. The imaging survey is augmented by an
extensive spectroscopic follow-up program to identify SNe, measure their
redshifts, and study the physical conditions of the explosions and their
environment through spectroscopic diagnostics. During the survey, light curves
are rapidly evaluated to provide an initial photometric type of the SNe, and a
selected sample of sources are targeted for spectroscopic observations. In the
first two seasons, 476 sources were selected for spectroscopic observations, of
which 403 were identified as SNe. For the Type Ia SNe, the main driver for the
Survey, our photometric typing and targeting efficiency is 90%. Only 6% of the
photometric SN Ia candidates were spectroscopically classified as non-SN Ia
instead, and the remaining 4% resulted in low signal-to-noise, unclassified
spectra. This paper describes the search algorithm and the software, and the
real-time processing of the SDSS imaging data. We also present the details of
the supernova candidate selection procedures and strategies for follow-up
spectroscopic and imaging observations of the discovered sources.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal (66 pages, 13
figures); typos correcte
The Peculiar SN 2005hk: Do Some Type Ia Supernovae Explode as Deflagrations?
We present extensive u'g'r'i'BVRIYJHKs photometry and optical spectroscopy of
SN 2005hk. These data reveal that SN 2005hk was nearly identical in its
observed properties to SN 2002cx, which has been called ``the most peculiar
known type Ia supernova.'' Both supernovae exhibited high ionization SN
1991T-like pre-maximum spectra, yet low peak luminosities like SN 1991bg. The
spectra reveal that SN 2005hk, like SN 2002cx, exhibited expansion velocities
that were roughly half those of typical type Ia supernovae. The R and I light
curves of both supernovae were also peculiar in not displaying the secondary
maximum observed for normal type Ia supernovae. Our YJH photometry of SN 2005hk
reveals the same peculiarity in the near-infrared. By combining our optical and
near-infrared photometry of SN 2005hk with published ultraviolet light curves
obtained with the Swift satellite, we are able to construct a bolometric light
curve from ~10 days before to ~60 days after B maximum. The shape and unusually
low peak luminosity of this light curve, plus the low expansion velocities and
absence of a secondary maximum at red and near-infrared wavelengths, are all in
reasonable agreement with model calculations of a 3D deflagration which
produces ~0.25 M_sun of 56Ni.Comment: Accepted by PASP, to appear in April 2007 issue, 63 pages, 16
figures, 11 table
Type Ia Supernova Properties as a Function of the Distance to the Host Galaxy in the SDSS-II SN Survey
We use type-Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) discovered by the SDSS-II SN Survey to
search for dependencies between SN Ia properties and the projected distance to
the host galaxy center, using the distance as a proxy for local galaxy
properties (local star-formation rate, local metallicity, etc.). The sample
consists of almost 200 spectroscopically or photometrically confirmed SNe Ia at
redshifts below 0.25. The sample is split into two groups depending on the
morphology of the host galaxy. We fit light-curves using both MLCS2k2 and
SALT2, and determine color (AV, c) and light-curve shape (delta, x1) parameters
for each SN Ia, as well as its residual in the Hubble diagram. We then
correlate these parameters with both the physical and the normalized distances
to the center of the host galaxy and look for trends in the mean values and
scatters of these parameters with increasing distance. The most significant (at
the 4-sigma level) finding is that the average fitted AV from MLCS2k2 and c
from SALT2 decrease with the projected distance for SNe Ia in spiral galaxies.
We also find indications that SNe in elliptical galaxies tend to have narrower
light-curves if they explode at larger distances, although this may be due to
selection effects in our sample. We do not find strong correlations between the
residuals of the distance moduli with respect to the Hubble flow and the
galactocentric distances, which indicates a limited correlation between SN
magnitudes after standardization and local host metallicity.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (33 pages, 5
figures, 8 tables
Substructure revealed by RR Lyraes in SDSS Stripe 82
We present an analysis of the substructure revealed by 407 RR Lyraes in Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Stripe 82. Period estimates are determined to high
accuracy using a string-length method. A subset of 178 RR Lyraes with
spectrally derived metallicities are employed to derive
metallicity-period-amplitude relations, which are then used to find
metallicities and distances for the entire sample. The RR Lyraes lie between 5
and 115 kpc from the Galactic center. They are divided into subsets of 316 RRab
types and 91 RRc types based on their period, colour and metallicity. The
density distribution is not smooth, but dominated by clumps and substructure.
Samples of 55 and 237 RR Lyraes associated with the Sagittarius Stream and the
Hercules-Aquila Cloud respectively are identified. Hence, ~ 70 % of the RR
Lyraes in Stripe 82 belong to known substructure. There is a sharp break in the
density distribution at Galactocentric radii of 40 kpc, reflecting the fact
that the dominant substructure in Stripe 82 - the Hercules-Aquila Cloud and the
Sagittarius Stream - lies within 40 kpc. In fact, almost 60 % of all the RR
Lyraes in Stripe 82 are associated with the Hercules-Aquila Cloud alone, which
emphasises its pre-eminence. Additionally, evidence of a new and distant
substructure - the Pisces Overdensity - is found, consisting of 28 faint RR
Lyraes centered on Galactic coordinates (80 deg, -55 deg) and with distances of
~ 80 kpc. The total stellar mass in the Pisces Overdensity is ~10000 solar
masses and its metallicity is [Fe/H] ~ -1.5.Comment: 15 pages, submitted to MNRA
SN 2006oz: rise of a super-luminous supernova observed by the SDSS-II SN Survey
We study SN 2006oz, a newly-recognized member of the class of H-poor,
super-luminous supernovae. We present multi-color light curves from the SDSS-II
SN Survey, that cover the rise time, as well as an optical spectrum that shows
that the explosion occurred at z~0.376. We fitted black body functions to
estimate the temperature and radius evolution of the photosphere and used the
parametrized code SYNOW to model the spectrum. We constructed a bolometric
light curve and compared it with explosion models. The very early light curves
show a dip in the g- and r-bands and a possible initial cooling phase in the
u-band before rising to maximum light. The bolometric light curve shows a
precursor plateau with a duration of 6-10 days in the rest-frame. A lower limit
of M_u < -21.5 can be placed on the absolute peak luminosity of the SN, while
the rise time is constrained to be at least 29 days. During our observations,
the emitting sphere doubled its radius to 2x10^15 cm, while the temperature
remained hot at 15000 K. As for other similar SNe, the spectrum is best modeled
with elements including O II and Mg II, while we tentatively suggest that Fe
III might be present. We suggest that the precursor plateau might be related to
a recombination wave in a circumstellar medium (CSM) and discuss whether this
is a common property of all similar explosions. The subsequent rise can be
equally well described by input from a magnetar or by ejecta-CSM interaction,
but the models are not well constrained owing to the lack of post-maximum
observations, and CSM interaction has difficulties accounting for the precursor
plateau self-consistently. Radioactive decay is less likely to be the mechanism
that powers the luminosity. The host galaxy, detected in deep imaging with the
10 m GTC, is a moderately young and star-forming, but not a starburst, galaxy.
It has an absolute magnitude of M_g = -16.9.Comment: Contains minor changes (of editorial nature) with respect to v1 in
order to match the published version. The abstract has been modified to fit
the arXiv space requirements. 11 pages, 8 figures, 3 table
LSST Science Book, Version 2.0
A survey that can cover the sky in optical bands over wide fields to faint
magnitudes with a fast cadence will enable many of the exciting science
opportunities of the next decade. The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST)
will have an effective aperture of 6.7 meters and an imaging camera with field
of view of 9.6 deg^2, and will be devoted to a ten-year imaging survey over
20,000 deg^2 south of +15 deg. Each pointing will be imaged 2000 times with
fifteen second exposures in six broad bands from 0.35 to 1.1 microns, to a
total point-source depth of r~27.5. The LSST Science Book describes the basic
parameters of the LSST hardware, software, and observing plans. The book
discusses educational and outreach opportunities, then goes on to describe a
broad range of science that LSST will revolutionize: mapping the inner and
outer Solar System, stellar populations in the Milky Way and nearby galaxies,
the structure of the Milky Way disk and halo and other objects in the Local
Volume, transient and variable objects both at low and high redshift, and the
properties of normal and active galaxies at low and high redshift. It then
turns to far-field cosmological topics, exploring properties of supernovae to
z~1, strong and weak lensing, the large-scale distribution of galaxies and
baryon oscillations, and how these different probes may be combined to
constrain cosmological models and the physics of dark energy.Comment: 596 pages. Also available at full resolution at
http://www.lsst.org/lsst/sciboo
First-year Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) supernova results: consistency and constraints with other intermediate-redshift datasets
We present an analysis of the luminosity distances of Type Ia Supernovae from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) Supernova Survey in conjunction with
other intermediate redshift (z<0.4) cosmological measurements including
redshift-space distortions from the Two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey
(2dFGRS), the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect seen by the SDSS, and the
latest Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) distance scale from both the SDSS and
2dFGRS. We have analysed the SDSS-II SN data alone using a variety of
"model-independent" methods and find evidence for an accelerating universe at
>97% level from this single dataset. We find good agreement between the
supernova and BAO distance measurements, both consistent with a
Lambda-dominated CDM cosmology, as demonstrated through an analysis of the
distance duality relationship between the luminosity (d_L) and angular diameter
(d_A) distance measures. We then use these data to estimate w within this
restricted redshift range (z<0.4). Our most stringent result comes from the
combination of all our intermediate-redshift data (SDSS-II SNe, BAO, ISW and
redshift-space distortions), giving w = -0.81 +0.16 -0.18(stat) +/- 0.15(sys)
and Omega_M=0.22 +0.09 -0.08 assuming a flat universe. This value of w, and
associated errors, only change slightly if curvature is allowed to vary,
consistent with constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background. We also
consider more limited combinations of the geometrical (SN, BAO) and dynamical
(ISW, redshift-space distortions) probes.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
- …
