889 research outputs found
Maximum Brightness and Post-Maximum Decline of Light Curves of SN~Ia: A Comparison of Theory and Observations
We compare the observed correlations between the maximum brightness,
postmaximum decline rate and color at maximum light of Type Ia supernovae (SN
Ia) with model predictions.
The observations are based on a total of 40 SN Ia with 29 SN of the Calan
Tololo Supernova Search and 11 local SN which cover a range of 2 mag in the
absolute visual brightness.
The observed correlations are not tight, one dimensional relations.
Supernovae with the same postmaximum decline or the same color have a spread in
visual magnitude of about 0.7 mag. The dispersion in the color-magnitude
relation may result from uncertainties in the distance determinations or the
interstellar reddening within the host galaxy. The dispersion in the decline
rate-magnitude relation suggests that an intrinsic spread in the supernova
properties exists that cannot be accounted for by any single relation between
visual brightness and postmaximum decline.
Theoretical correlations are derived from a grid of models which encompasses
delayed detonations, pulsating delayed detonations, the merging scenario and
helium detonations.
We find that the observed correlations can be understood in terms of
explosions of Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs.
Our models show an intrinsic spread in the relations of about 0.5 mag in the
maximum brightness and about 0.1 mag in the B-V color.
Our study provides strong evidence against the mechanism of helium detonation
for subluminous, red SN Ia.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, macros ''aaspp.sty'. LaTeX Style. Astrophysical
Journal Letters, submitted Jul. 1995, revised Aug. 1995, resubmitted Sep.
199
Local Ignition in Carbon/Oxygen White Dwarfs -- I: One-zone Ignition and Spherical Shock Ignition of Detonations
The details of ignition of Type Ia supernovae remain fuzzy, despite the
importance of this input for any large-scale model of the final explosion.
Here, we begin a process of understanding the ignition of these hotspots by
examining the burning of one zone of material, and then investigate the
ignition of a detonation due to rapid heating at single point.
We numerically measure the ignition delay time for onset of burning in
mixtures of degenerate material and provide fitting formula for conditions of
relevance in the Type Ia problem. Using the neon abundance as a proxy for the
white dwarf metallicity, we then find that ignition times can decrease by ~20%
with addition of even 5% of neon by mass. When temperature fluctuations that
successfully kindle a region are very rare, such a reduction in ignition time
can increase the probability of ignition by orders of magnitude. If the neon
comes largely at the expense of carbon, a similar increase in the ignition time
can occur.
We then consider the ignition of a detonation by an explosive energy input in
one localized zone, eg a Sedov blast wave leading to a shock-ignited
detonation. Building on previous work on curved detonations, we find that
surprisingly large inputs of energy are required to successfully launch a
detonation, leading to required matchheads of ~4500 detonation thicknesses -
tens of centimeters to hundreds of meters - which is orders of magnitude larger
than naive considerations might suggest. This is a very difficult constraint to
meet for some pictures of a deflagration-to-detonation transition, such as a
Zel'dovich gradient mechanism ignition in the distributed burning regime.Comment: 29 pages; accepted to ApJ. Comments welcome at
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~ljdursi/thisweek/ . Updated version addressing
referee comment
Exact asymptotic expansions for the cylindrical Poisson-Boltzmann equation
The mathematical theory of integrable Painleve/Toda type systems sheds new
light on the behavior of solutions to the Poisson-Boltzmann equation for the
potential due to a long rod-like macroion. We investigate here the case of
symmetric electrolytes together with that of 1:2 and 2:1 salts. Short and large
scale features are analyzed, with a particular emphasis on the low salinity
regime. Analytical expansions are derived for several quantities relevant for
polyelectrolytes theory, such as the Manning radius. In addition, accurate and
practical expressions are worked out for the electrostatic potential, which
improve upon previous work and cover the full range of radial distances
Can differences in the nickel abundance in Chandrasekhar mass models explain the relation between brightness and decline rate of normal Type Ia Supernovae?
The use of Type Ia supernovae as distance indicators relies on the
determination of their brightness. This is not constant, but it can be
calibrated using an observed relation between the brightness and the properties
of the optical light curve (decline rate, width, shape), which indicates that
brighter SNe have broader, slower light curves. However, the physical basis for
this relation is not yet fully understood. Among possible causes are different
masses of the progenitor white dwarfs or different opacities in
Chandrasekhar-mass explosions. We parametrise the Chandrasekhar-mass models
presented by Iwamoto et al (1999), which synthesize different amounts of Ni,
and compute bolometric light curves and spectra at various epochs. Since
opacity in SNe Ia is due mostly to spectral lines, it should depend on the mass
of Fe-peak elements synthesized in the explosion, and on the temperature in the
ejecta. Bolometric light curves computed using these prescriptions for the
optical opacity reproduce the relation between brightness and decline rate.
Furthermore, when spectra are calculated, the change in colour between maximum
and two weeks later allows the observed relation between M_B(Max) and
Dm_{15}(B) to be reproduced quite nicely. Spectra computed at various epochs
compare well with corresponding spectra of spectroscopically normal SNeIa
selected to cover a similar range of Dm_{15}(B) values.Comment: 25 pages, including 6 figures. Accepted for publication in 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
Physics of the interior of a spherical, charged black hole with a scalar field
We analyse the physics of nonlinear gravitational processes inside a
spherical charged black hole perturbed by a self-gravitating massless scalar
field. For this purpose we created an appropriate numerical code. Throughout
the paper, in addition to investigation of the properties of the mathematical
singularities where some curvature scalars are equal to infinity, we analyse
the properties of the physical singularities where the Kretschmann curvature
scalar is equal to the planckian value. Using a homogeneous approximation we
analyse the properties of the spacetime near a spacelike singularity in
spacetimes influenced by different matter contents namely a scalar field,
pressureless dust and matter with ultrarelativistic isotropic pressure. We also
carry out full nonlinear analyses of the scalar field and geometry of spacetime
inside black holes by means of an appropriate numerical code with adaptive mesh
refinement capabilities. We use this code to investigate the nonlinear effects
of gravitational focusing, mass inflation, matter squeeze, and these effects
dependence on the initial boundary conditions. It is demonstrated that the
position of the physical singularity inside a black hole is quite different
from the positions of the mathematical singularities. In the case of the
existence of a strong outgoing flux of the scalar field inside a black hole it
is possible to have the existence of two null singularities and one central
singularity simultaneously
Thermonuclear Supernovae: Simulations of the Deflagration Stage and Their Implications
Large-scale three-dimensional numerical simulations of the deflagration stage
of a thermonuclear supernova explosion show the formation and evolution of a
highly convoluted turbulent flame in a gravitational field of an expanding
carbon-oxygen white dwarf. The flame dynamics is dominated by the
gravity-induced Rayleigh-Taylor instability that controls the burning rate. The
thermonuclear deflagration releases enough energy to produce a healthy
explosion. The turbulent flame, however, leaves large amounts of unburnt and
partially burnt material near the star center, whereas observations imply these
materials only in outer layers. This disagreement could be resolved if the
deflagration triggers a detonation.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Science, January 200
Direct Numerical Simulations of Type Ia Supernovae Flames II: The Rayleigh-Taylor Instability
A Type Ia supernova explosion likely begins as a nuclear runaway near the
center of a carbon-oxygen white dwarf. The outward propagating flame is
unstable to the Landau-Darrieus, Rayleigh-Taylor, and Kelvin-Helmholtz
instabilities, which serve to accelerate it to a large fraction of the speed of
sound. We investigate the Rayleigh-Taylor unstable flame at the transition from
the flamelet regime to the distributed-burning regime, around densities of
g/cc, through detailed, fully resolved simulations. A low Mach number,
adaptive mesh hydrodynamics code is used to achieve the necessary resolution
and long time scales. As the density is varied, we see a fundamental change in
the character of the burning--at the low end of the density range the
Rayleigh-Taylor instability dominates the burning, whereas at the high end the
burning suppresses the instability. In all cases, significant acceleration of
the flame is observed, limited only by the size of the domain we are able to
study. We discuss the implications of these results on the potential for a
deflagration to detonation transition.Comment: submitted to ApJ, some figures degraded due to size constraint
Constraints on Type Ia Supernova Models from X-ray Spectra of Galaxy Clusters
We present constraints on theoretical models of Type Ia supernovae using
spatially resolved ASCA X-ray spectroscopy of three galaxy clusters: Abell 496,
Abell 2199 and Abell 3571. All three clusters have central iron abundance
enhancements; an ensemble of abundance ratios are used to show that most of the
iron in the central regions of the clusters comes from SN Ia. These
observations are consistent with the suppressed galactic wind scenario proposed
by Dupke and White (1999). At the center of each cluster, simultaneous analysis
of spectra from all ASCA instruments shows that the nickel to iron abundance
ratio (normalized by the solar ratio) is Ni/Fe ~ 4. We use the nickel to iron
ratio as a discriminator between SN Ia explosion models: the Ni/Fe ratio of
ejecta from the "Convective Deflagration" model W7 is consistent with the
observations, while those of "delayed detonation" models are not consistent at
the 90% confidence level.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, accepted by The Astrophysical Journa
Chemical analysis of aerosol in the Venusian cloud layer by reaction gas chromatography on board the Vega landers
The experiment on sulfuric acid aerosol determination in the Venusian cloud layer on board the Vega landers is described. An average content of sulfuric acid of approximately 1 mg/cu m was found for the samples taken from the atmosphere at heights from 63 to 48 km and analyzed with the SIGMA-3 chromatograph. Sulfur dioxide (SO2) was revealed in the gaseous sample at the height of 48 km. From the experimental results and blank run measurements, a suggestion is made that the Venusian cloud layer aerosol consists of more complicated particles than the sulfuric acid water solution does
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