35 research outputs found
Type II Supernovae as Standardized Candles
We present evidence for a correlation between expansion velocities of the
ejecta of Type II plateau supernovae and their bolometric luminosities during
the plateau phase. This correlation permits one to standardize the candles and
decrease the scatter in the Hubble diagram from ~1 mag to a level of 0.4 and
0.3 mag in the V and I bands, respectively. When we restrict the sample to the
eight objects which are well in the Hubble flow (cz > 3,000 km/s) the scatter
drops even further to only 0.2 mag (or 9% in distance), which is comparable to
the precision yielded by Type Ia supernovae and far better than the ``expanding
photosphere method'' applied to Type II supernovae. Using SN 1987A to calibrate
the Hubble diagrams we get Ho=55+/-12.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted by ApJ
Selection Effects, Biases, and Constraints in the Calan/Tololo Supernova Survey
We use Monte Carlo simulations of the Calan/Tololo photographic supernova
survey to show that a simple model of the survey's selection effects accounts
for the observed distributions of recession velocity, apparent magnitude,
angular offset, and projected radial distance between the supernova and the
host galaxy nucleus for this sample of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). The model
includes biases due to the flux-limited nature of the survey, the different
light curve morphologies displayed by different SNe Ia, and the difficulty of
finding events projected near the central regions of the host galaxies. From
these simulations we estimate the bias in the zero-point and slope of the
absolute magnitude-decline rate relation used in SNe Ia distance measurements.
For an assumed intrinsic scatter of 0.15 mag about this relation, these
selection effects decrease the zero-point by 0.04 mag. The slope of the
relation is not significantly biased. We conclude that despite selection
effects in the survey, the shape and zero-point of the relation determined from
the Calan/Tololo sample are quite reliable. We estimate the degree of
incompleteness of the survey as a function of decline rate and estimate a
corrected luminosity function for SNe Ia in which the frequency of SNe appears
to increase with decline rate (the fainter SNe are more common). Finally, we
compute the integrated detection efficiency of the survey in order to infer the
rate of SNe Ia from the 31 events found. For a value of Ho=65 km/sec/Mpc we
obtain a SN Ia rate of 0.21(+0.30)(-0.13) SNu. This is in good agreement with
the value 0.16+/-0.05 SNu recently determined by Capellaro et al. (1997).Comment: 36 pages, 19 figures as extra files, to appear in the A
Positron Escape from Type Ia Supernovae
We generate bolometric light curves for a variety of type Ia supernova models
at late times, simulating gamma-ray and positron transport for various
assumptions about the magnetic field and ionization of the ejecta. These
calculated light curve shapes are compared with light curves of specific
supernovae for which there have been adequate late observations. %The selection
of models is generally not based upon the %ability to fit the late
observations, but rather because the %model has been demonstrated by other
authors to approximate the spectra %and early light curves of that specific SN.
From these comparisons we draw two conclusions: whether a suggested model is
an acceptable approximation of a particular event, and, given that it is, the
magnetic field characteristics and degree of ionization that are most
consistent with the observed light curve shape. For the ten SNe included in
this study, five strongly suggest Co positron escape as would be
permitted by a weak or radially-combed magnetic field. Of the remaining five
SNe, none clearly show the upturned light curve expected for positron trapping
in a strong, tangled magnetic field. Chandrasekhar mass models can explain
normally, sub-, and super- luminous supernova light curves; sub-Chandrasekhar
mass models have difficulties with sub- (and potentially normally) luminous
SNe. An estimate of the galactic positron production rate from type Ia SNe is
compared with gamma-ray observations of Galactic 511 keV annihilation
radiation. Additionally, we emphasize the importance of correctly treating the
positron transport for calculations of spectra, or any properties, of type Ia
SNe at late epochs ( 200 d).Comment: 82 pages including 25 figure
Survival Probability of a Local Excitation in a Non-Markovian Environment: Survival Collapse, Zeno and Anti-Zeno effects
The decay dynamics of a local excitation interacting with a non-Markovian
environment, modeled by a semi-infinite tight-binding chain, is exactly
evaluated. We identify distinctive regimes for the dynamics. Sequentially: (i)
early quadratic decay of the initial-state survival probability, up to a
spreading time , (ii) exponential decay described by a self-consistent
Fermi Golden Rule, and (iii) asymptotic behavior governed by quantum diffusion
through the return processes and leading to an inverse power law decay. At this
last cross-over time a survival collapse becomes possible. This could
reduce the survival probability by several orders of magnitude. The cross-overs
times and allow to assess the range of applicability of the
Fermi Golden Rule and give the conditions for the observation of the Zeno and
Anti-Zeno effect
An IR Search for Extinguished Supernovae in Starburst Galaxies
IR and Radio band observations of heavily extinguished regions in starburst
galaxies suggest a very high SN rate associated with such regions. Optically
measured supernova (SN) rates may therefore underestimate the total SN rate by
factors of up to 10, due to the high extinction to SNe in starburst regions.
The IR/radio SN rates come from a variety of indirect means, however, which
suffer from model dependence and other problems.
We describe a direct measurement of the SN rate from a regular patrol of
starburst galaxies done with K' band imaging to minimize the effects of
extinction. A collection of K' measurements of core-collapse SNe near maximum
light is presented. Results of a preliminary SN search using the MIRC camera at
the Wyoming IR Observatory (WIRO), and an improved search using the ORCA optics
are described. A monthly patrol of starburst galaxies within 25 Mpc should
yield 1.6 - 9.6 SNe/year. Our MIRC search with low-resolution (2.2" pixels)
failed to find extinguished SNe, limiting the SN rate outside the nucleus (at >
15" radius) to less than 3.8 Supernova Rate Units (SRU or SNe/century/10^10
L(solar); 90% confidence). The MIRC camera had insufficient resolution to
search nuclear starburst regions, where SN activity is concentrated, explaining
why we found no heavily obscured SNe. We conclude that high-resolution, small
field SN searches in starburst nuclei are more productive than low resolution,
large-field searches, even for our large galaxies. With our ORCA
high-resolution optics, we could limit the total SN rate to < 1.3 SRU at 90%
confidence in 3 years of observations, lower than the most pessimistic
estimate.Comment: AJ Submitted 1998 Dec. 13. View figures and download all as one file
at http://panisse.lbl.gov/public/bruce/irs
Metallicity Gradients in the Intracluster Gas of Abell 496
Analysis of spatially resolved ASCA spectra of the intracluster gas in Abell
496 confirms there are mild metal abundance enhancements near the center, as
previously found by White et al. (1994) in a joint analysis of Ginga LAC and
Einstein SSS spectra. Simultaneous analysis of spectra from all ASCA
instruments (SIS + GIS) shows that the iron abundance is 0.36 +- 0.03 solar
3-12' from the center of the cluster and rises ~50% to 0.53 +- 0.04 solar
within the central 2'. The F-test shows that this abundance gradient is
significant at the >99.99% level. Nickel and sulfur abundances are also
centrally enhanced. We use a variety of elemental abundance ratios to assess
the relative contribution of SN Ia and SN II to the metal enrichment of the
intracluster gas. We find spatial gradients in several abundance ratios,
indicating that the fraction of iron from SN Ia increases toward the cluster
center, with SN Ia accounting for ~50% of the iron mass 3-12' from the center
and ~70% within 2'. The increased proportion of SN Ia ejecta at the center is
such that the central iron abundance enhancement can be attributed wholly to SN
Ia; we find no significant gradient in SN II ejecta. These spatial gradients in
the proportion of SN Ia/II ejecta imply that the dominant metal enrichment
mechanism near the center is different than in the outer parts of the cluster.
We show that the central abundance enhancement is unlikely to be due to ram
pressure stripping of gas from cluster galaxies, or to secularly accumulated
stellar mass loss within the central cD. We suggest that the additional SN Ia
ejecta near the center is the vestige of a secondary SN Ia-driven wind from the
cD (following a more energetic protogalactic SN II-driven wind phase), which
was partially smothered in the cD due to its location at the cluster center.Comment: 25 pages AASTeX; 6 encapsulated PostScript figures; accepted for
publication in ApJ. Replaced with revised versio
Effects of the background radiation on radio pulsar and supernova remnant searches and the birth rates of these objects
In different directions of the Galaxy the Galactic background radio radiation
and radiation of complex star formation regions which include large number of
OB associations have different influences on radio pulsar (PSR) and supernova
remnant (SNR) searches. In this work we analyse the effects of these background
radiations on the observations of PSRs at 1400 MHz and SNRs at 1000 MHz. In the
interval l=0 the PSRs with flux F0.2 mJy and the SNRs
with surface brightness WmHzsr are
observable for all values of l and b. All the SNRs with
WmHzsr can be observed in the
interval 60l. We have examined samples of PSRs and SNRs to
estimate the birth rates of these objects in the region up to 3.2 kpc from the
Sun and also in the Galaxy. The birth rate of PSRs is about one in 200 years
and the birth rate of SNRs is about one in 65 years in our galaxy.Comment: revised versio
The origin of intergalactic thermonuclear supernovae
The population synthesis method is used to study the possibility of
explaining the appreciable fraction (20^+12_15%) of the intergalactic (no-host)
type Ia supernovae observed in galaxy clusters (Gal-Yam ete al. 2003) by binary
whote dwarf merginngs in the cores of globular clusters. In a typical globular
cluster, the number of merging double white dwarfs is fount to be smaller than
10^{-13} per year per average cluster star during the entire evolution of the
cluster, which is a factor of 3 higher than in a Milky-Way-type galaxy. From 5
to 30% of the merging white dwarfs are dynamically expelled from the cluster
with barycenter velocities up to 150 km/s. SN Ia explosions during the mergers
of binary white dwarfs in dense star clusters may account for \sim 1% of the
total rate of SN Ia in the central parts of galaxy clusters if the baryon mass
fraction in such star clusters is \sim 0.3%.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figs. Astronomy Letters (in press
Measurement of the Slope Parameter for the eta->3pi0 Decay in the pp->pp eta Reaction
The CELSIUS/WASA setup is used to measure the 3pi0 decay of eta mesons
produced in pp interactions with beam kinetic energies of 1.36 and 1.45 GeV.
The efficiency-corrected Dalitz plot and density distributions for this decay
are shown, together with a fit of the quadratic slope parameter alpha yielding
alpha = -0.026 +/- 0.010(stat) +/- 0.010(syst). This value is compared to
recent experimental results and theoretical predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 7 Postscript figures, uses revtex4.st
Measurement of the eta->pi+pi-e+e- decay branching ratio
The reaction pd->3He eta at threshold was used to provide a clean source of
eta mesons for decay studies with the WASA detector at CELSIUS. The branching
ratio of the decay eta->pi+pi-e+e- is measured to be (4.3+/-1.3+/-0.4)x10^-4.Comment: 10 pages,6 figures revised versio