1,413 research outputs found
The Extreme Hosts of Extreme Supernovae
We use GALEX ultraviolet (UV) and optical integrated photometry of the hosts of 17 luminous supernovae (LSNe, having peak M_V 100 M_☉), by appearing in low-SFR hosts, are potential tests for theories of the initial mass function that limit the maximum mass of a star based on the SFR
The Rising Light Curves of Type Ia Supernovae
We present an analysis of the early, rising light curves of 18 Type Ia
supernovae (SNe Ia) discovered by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) and the
La Silla-QUEST variability survey (LSQ). We fit these early data flux using a
simple power-law to determine the time of first
light , and hence the rise-time from first light to
peak luminosity, and the exponent of the power-law rise (). We find a mean
uncorrected rise time of days, with individual SN rise-times
ranging from to days. The exponent n shows significant
departures from the simple 'fireball model' of (or ) usually assumed in the literature. With a mean value of , our data also show significant diversity from event to event. This
deviation has implications for the distribution of 56Ni throughout the SN
ejecta, with a higher index suggesting a lesser degree of 56Ni mixing. The
range of n found also confirms that the 56Ni distribution is not standard
throughout the population of SNe Ia, in agreement with earlier work measuring
such abundances through spectral modelling. We also show that the duration of
the very early light curve, before the luminosity has reached half of its
maximal value, does not correlate with the light curve shape or stretch used to
standardise SNe Ia in cosmological applications. This has implications for the
cosmological fitting of SN Ia light curves.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Sensitive Search for Radio Variables and Transients in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South
We report on an analysis of the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (E-CDFS) region using archival data from the Very Large Array, with the goal of studying radio variability and transients at the sub-milliJansky level. The 49 epochs of E-CDFS observations at 1.4 GHz sample timescales from 1 day to 3 months. We find that only a fraction (1%) of unresolved radio sources above 40 μJy are variable at the 4σ level. There is no evidence that the fractional variability changes along with the known transition of radio-source populations below 1 mJy. Optical identifications of the sources show that the variable radio emission is associated with the central regions of an active galactic nucleus or a star-forming galaxy. After a detailed comparison of the efficacy of various source-finding algorithms, we use the best to carry out a transient search. No transients were found. This implies that the areal density of transients with peak flux density greater than 0.21 mJy is less than 0.37 deg^(–2) (at a confidence level of 95%). This result is approximately an order of magnitude below the transient rate measured at 5 GHz by Bower et al. but it is consistent with more recent upper limits from Frail et al. Our findings suggest that the radio sky at 1.4 GHz is relatively quiet. For multi-wavelength transient searches, such as the electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational waves, this frequency may be optimal for reducing the high background of false positives
Constraints on Planetary Companions in the Magnification A=256 Microlensing Event: OGLE-2003-BLG-423
We develop a new method of modeling microlensing events based on a Monte
Carlo simulation that incorporates both a Galactic model and the constraints
imposed by the observed characteristics of the event. The method provides an
unbiased way to analyze the event especially when parameters are poorly
constrained by the observed lightcurve. We apply this method to search for
planetary companions of the lens in OGLE-2003-BLG-423, whose maximum
magnification A_max=256+-43 (or A_max=400+-115 from the lightcurve data alone)
is the highest among single-lens events ever recorded. The method permits us,
for the first time, to place constraints directly in the
planet-mass/projected-physical-separation plane rather than in the
mass-ratio/Einstein-radius plane as was done previously. For example,
Jupiter-mass companions of main-sequence stars at 2.5 AU are excluded with 80%
efficiency.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
GRB070125: The First Long-Duration Gamma-Ray Burst in a Halo Environment
We present the discovery and high signal-to-noise spectroscopic observations
of the optical afterglow of the long-duration gamma-ray burst GRB070125. Unlike
all previously observed long-duration afterglows in the redshift range 0.5 < z
1.0 A) absorption
features in the wavelength range 4000 - 10000 A. The sole significant feature
is a weak doublet we identify as Mg II 2796 (W = 0.18 +/- 0.02 A), 2803 (W =
0.08 +/- 0.01) at z = 1.5477 +/- 0.0001. The low observed Mg II and inferred H
I column densities are typically observed in galactic halos, far away from the
bulk of massive star formation. Deep ground-based imaging reveals no host
directly underneath the afterglow to a limit of R > 25.4 mag. Either of the two
nearest blue galaxies could host GRB070125; the large offset (d >= 27 kpc)
would naturally explain the low column density. To remain consistent with the
large local (i.e. parsec scale) circum-burst density inferred from broadband
afterglow observations, we speculate GRB070125 may have occurred far away from
the disk of its host in a compact star-forming cluster. Such distant stellar
clusters, typically formed by dynamical galaxy interactions, have been observed
in the nearby universe, and should be more prevalent at z>1 where galaxy
mergers occur more frequently.Comment: 8 pages, accepted in Ap
Supernova PTF 09uj: A possible shock breakout from a dense circumstellar wind
Type-IIn supernovae (SNe), which are characterized by strong interaction of
their ejecta with the surrounding circumstellar matter (CSM), provide a unique
opportunity to study the mass-loss history of massive stars shortly before
their explosive death. We present the discovery and follow-up observations of a
Type IIn SN, PTF 09uj, detected by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF).
Serendipitous observations by GALEX at ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths detected
the rise of the SN light curve prior to the PTF discovery. The UV light curve
of the SN rose fast, with a time scale of a few days, to a UV absolute AB
magnitude of about -19.5. Modeling our observations, we suggest that the fast
rise of the UV light curve is due to the breakout of the SN shock through the
dense CSM (n~10^10 cm^-3). Furthermore, we find that prior to the explosion the
progenitor went through a phase of high mass-loss rate (~0.1 solar mass per
year) that lasted for a few years. The decay rate of this SN was fast relative
to that of other SNe IIn.Comment: Accepted to Apj, 6 pages, 4 figure
A multi-wavelength investigation of the radio-loud supernova PTF11qcj and its circumstellar environment
We present the discovery, classification, and extensive panchromatic (from
radio to X-ray) follow-up observations of PTF11qcj, a supernova discovered by
the Palomar Transient Factory. PTF11qcj is located at a distance of dL ~ 124
Mpc. Our observations with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array show that this
event is radio-loud: PTF11qcj reached a radio peak luminosity comparable to
that of the famous gamma-ray-burst-associated supernova 1998bw (L_{5GHz} ~
10^{29} erg/s/Hz). PTF11qcj is also detected in X-rays with the Chandra
observatory, and in the infrared band with Spitzer. Our multi-wavelength
analysis probes the supernova interaction with circumstellar material. The
radio observations suggest a progenitor mass-loss rate of ~10^{-4} Msun/yr x
(v_w/1000 km/s), and a velocity of ~(0.3-0.5)c for the fastest moving ejecta
(at ~10d after explosion). However, these estimates are derived assuming the
simplest model of supernova ejecta interacting with a smooth circumstellar
material characterized by radial power-law density profile, and do not account
for possible inhomogeneities in the medium and asphericity of the explosion.
The radio light curve shows deviations from such a simple model, as well as a
re-brightening at late times. The X-ray flux from PTF11qcj is compatible with
the high-frequency extrapolation of the radio synchrotron emission (within the
large uncertainties). An IR light echo from pre-existing dust is in agreement
with our infrared data. Our analysis of pre-explosion data from the Palomar
Transient Factory suggests that a precursor eruption of absolute magnitude M_r
~ -13 mag may have occurred ~ 2.5 yr prior to the supernova explosion. Based on
our panchromatic follow-up campaign, we conclude that PTF11qcj fits the
expectations from the explosion of a Wolf-Rayet star. Precursor eruptions may
be a feature characterizing the final pre-explosion evolution of such stars.Comment: 43 pages, 15 figures; this version matches the one published in ApJ
(includes minor changes that address the Referee's comments.
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