80 research outputs found
The Possible White Dwarf-Neutron Star Connection
The current status of the problem of whether neutron stars can form, in close
binary systems, by accretion-induced collapse (AIC) of white dwarfs is
examined. We find that, in principle, both initially cold C+O white dwarfs in
the high-mass tail of their mass distribution in binaries and O+Ne+Mg white
dwarfs can produce neutron stars. Which fractions of neutron stars in different
types of binaries (or descendants from binaries) might originate from this
process remains uncertain.Comment: 6 pages. To appear in "White Dwarfs", ed. J. Isern, M. Hernanz, and
E. Garcia-Berro (Dordrecht: Kluwer
Discovery of the progenitor of the type Ia supernova 2007on
Type Ia supernovae are exploding stars that are used to measure the
accelerated expansion of the Universe and are responsible for most of the iron
ever produced. Although there is general agreement that the exploding star is a
white dwarf in a binary system, the exact configuration and trigger of the
explosion is unclear, which could hamper their use for precision cosmology. Two
families of progenitor models have been proposed. In the first, a white dwarf
accretes material from a companion until it exceeds the Chandrasekhar mass,
collapses and explodes. Alternatively, two white dwarfs merge, again causing
catastrophic collapse and an explosion. It has hitherto been impossible to
determine if either model is correct. Here we report the discovery of an object
in pre-supernova archival X-ray images at the position of the recent type Ia
supernova (2007on) in the elliptical galaxy NGC 1404. Deep optical images (also
archival) show no sign of this object. From this we conclude that the X-ray
source is the progenitor of the supernova, which favours the accretion model
for this supernova, although the host galaxy is older (6-9 Gyr) than the age at
which the explosions are predicted in the accreting models.Comment: Published in Nature See also the two follow-up papers: Roelofs,
Bassa, Voss, Nelemans Nelemans, Voss, Roelofs, Bassa both on astro-ph
02/15/0
Two populations of X-ray pulsars produced by two types of supernovae
Two types of supernova are thought to produce the overwhelming majority of neutron stars in the Universe. The first type, iron-core collapse supernovae, occurs when a high-mass star develops a degenerate iron core that exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit. The second type, electron-capture supernovae, is associated with the collapse of a lower-mass oxygen-neon-magnesium core as it loses pressure support owing to the sudden capture of electrons by neon and/or magnesium nuclei. It has hitherto been impossible to identify the two distinct families of neutron stars produced in these formation channels. Here we report that a large, well-known class of neutron-star-hosting X-ray pulsars is actually composed of two distinct sub-populations with different characteristic spin periods, orbital periods and orbital eccentricities. This class, the Be/X-ray binaries, contains neutron stars that accrete material from a more massive companion star. The two sub-populations are most probably associated with the two distinct types of neutron-star-forming supernovae, with electron-capture supernovae preferentially producing system with short spin period, short orbital periods and low eccentricity. Intriguingly, the split between the two sub-populations is clearest in the distribution of the logarithm of spin period, a result that had not been predicted and which still remains to be explaine
Entangled-State Cycles of Atomic Collective-Spin States
We study quantum trajectories of collective atomic spin states of
effective two-level atoms driven with laser and cavity fields. We show that
interesting ``entangled-state cycles'' arise probabilistically when the (Raman)
transition rates between the two atomic levels are set equal. For odd (even)
, there are () possible cycles. During each cycle the
-qubit state switches, with each cavity photon emission, between the states
, where is a Dicke state in a rotated
collective basis. The quantum number (), which distinguishes the
particular cycle, is determined by the photon counting record and varies
randomly from one trajectory to the next. For even it is also possible,
under the same conditions, to prepare probabilistically (but in steady state)
the Dicke state , i.e., an -qubit state with excitations,
which is of particular interest in the context of multipartite entanglement.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Type Ia Supernova Explosion Models
Because calibrated light curves of Type Ia supernovae have become a major
tool to determine the local expansion rate of the Universe and also its
geometrical structure, considerable attention has been given to models of these
events over the past couple of years. There are good reasons to believe that
perhaps most Type Ia supernovae are the explosions of white dwarfs that have
approached the Chandrasekhar mass, M_ch ~ 1.39 M_sun, and are disrupted by
thermonuclear fusion of carbon and oxygen. However, the mechanism whereby such
accreting carbon-oxygen white dwarfs explode continues to be uncertain. Recent
progress in modeling Type Ia supernovae as well as several of the still open
questions are addressed in this review. Although the main emphasis will be on
studies of the explosion mechanism itself and on the related physical
processes, including the physics of turbulent nuclear combustion in degenerate
stars, we also discuss observational constraints.Comment: 38 pages, 4 figures, Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, in
pres
Unique White Dwarfs Accompanying Recycled Pulsars
I introduce the two classes of pulsar, white-dwarf binaries, and describe for
each what we have learned from a specific system, PSR J1012+5307 and PSR
B0655+64, respectively, summarising what has been done, presenting new results,
and discussing what the future may hold. Briefly, for the companion of PSR
J1012+5307 we find a DA spectrum, and infer a mass of about 0.16Msun, the
lowest among all spectroscopically identified white dwarfs. Combined with a
radial-velocity orbit, a neutron-star mass between 1.5 and 3.2Msun (95% conf.)
is derived. The companion of PSR B0655+64 shows strong Swan C2 bands, i.e., it
is a DQ star. Unlike anything reported for other DQs, however, it shows
variations in strength of the bands by a factor two. Most likely, the
variations are periodic, with a period of about 9.7h. This is substantially
shorter than the 1-day orbital period, which can likely be understood in terms
of its past evolution.Comment: 6 pages of text and 2 figures, LaTeX using crckapb.sty (included) and
psfig.sty. To appear in Proc. 10th European Workshop on white dwarfs (Eds.
Isern, Hernanz, & Garcia-Berro
Constraints on the Progenitor System of the Type Ia Supernova SN 2011fe/PTF11kly
Type Ia supernovae (SNe) serve as a fundamental pillar of modern cosmology,
owing to their large luminosity and a well-defined relationship between
light-curve shape and peak brightness. The precision distance measurements
enabled by SNe Ia first revealed the accelerating expansion of the universe,
now widely believed (though hardly understood) to require the presence of a
mysterious "dark" energy. General consensus holds that Type Ia SNe result from
thermonuclear explosions of a white dwarf (WD) in a binary system; however,
little is known of the precise nature of the companion star and the physical
properties of the progenitor system. Here we make use of extensive historical
imaging obtained at the location of SN 2011fe/PTF11kly, the closest SN Ia
discovered in the digital imaging era, to constrain the visible-light
luminosity of the progenitor to be 10-100 times fainter than previous limits on
other SN Ia progenitors. This directly rules out luminous red giants and the
vast majority of helium stars as the mass-donating companion to the exploding
white dwarf. Any evolved red companion must have been born with mass less than
3.5 times the mass of the Sun. These observations favour a scenario where the
exploding WD of SN 2011fe/PTF11kly, accreted matter either from another WD, or
by Roche-lobe overflow from a subgiant or main-sequence companion star.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, submitte
The Evolution of Compact Binary Star Systems
We review the formation and evolution of compact binary stars consisting of
white dwarfs (WDs), neutron stars (NSs), and black holes (BHs). Binary NSs and
BHs are thought to be the primary astrophysical sources of gravitational waves
(GWs) within the frequency band of ground-based detectors, while compact
binaries of WDs are important sources of GWs at lower frequencies to be covered
by space interferometers (LISA). Major uncertainties in the current
understanding of properties of NSs and BHs most relevant to the GW studies are
discussed, including the treatment of the natal kicks which compact stellar
remnants acquire during the core collapse of massive stars and the common
envelope phase of binary evolution. We discuss the coalescence rates of binary
NSs and BHs and prospects for their detections, the formation and evolution of
binary WDs and their observational manifestations. Special attention is given
to AM CVn-stars -- compact binaries in which the Roche lobe is filled by
another WD or a low-mass partially degenerate helium-star, as these stars are
thought to be the best LISA verification binary GW sources.Comment: 105 pages, 18 figure
Type Ia Supernovae and the Hubble Constant
The focus of this review is the work that has been done during the 1990s on
using Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) to measure the Hubble constant (). SNe
Ia are well suited for measuring . A straightforward maximum-light color
criterion can weed out the minority of observed events that are either
intrinsically subluminous or substantially extinguished by dust, leaving a
majority subsample that has observational absolute-magnitude dispersions of
less than mag.
Correlations between absolute magnitude and one or more distance-independent SN
Ia or parent-galaxy observables can be used to further standardize the absolute
magnitudes to better than 0.2 mag. The absolute magnitudes can be calibrated in
two independent ways --- empirically, using Cepheid-based distances to parent
galaxies of SNe Ia, and physically, by light curve and spectrum fitting. At
present the empirical and physical calibrations are in agreement at or -19.5. Various ways that have been used to match
Cepheid-calibrated SNe Ia or physical models to SNe Ia that have been observed
out in the Hubble flow have given values of distributed throughout the
range 54 to 67 km/s Mpc. Astronomers who want a consensus value of
from SNe Ia with conservative errors could, for now, use km/s
Mpc^{-1}$.Comment: 46 pages. Hard copies of figures, all from the published literature,
can be obtained from the author. With permission, from the Annual Review of
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 36, copyright 1998, by Annual Review
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