409 research outputs found
Metallicity in the GRB 100316D/SN 2010bh Host Complex
The recent long-duration GRB 100316D, associated with supernova SN 2010bh and
detected by Swift, is one of the nearest GRB-SNe ever observed (z = 0.059).
This provides us with a unique opportunity to study the explosion environment
on ~kpc scale in relation to the host galaxy complex. Here we present
spatially-resolved spectrophotometry of the host galaxy, focusing on both the
explosion site and the brightest star-forming regions. Using these data, we
extract the spatial profiles of the relevant emission features (Halpha, Hbeta,
[OIII] 5007A, and [NII] 6584A), and use these profiles to examine variations in
metallicity and star formation rate as a function of position in the host
galaxy. We conclude that GRB 100316D/SN2010bh occurred in a low-metallicity
host galaxy, and that the GRB-SN explosion site corresponds to the region with
the lowest metallicity and highest star formation rate sampled by our
observations.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Aspherical Supernova Shock Breakout and the Observations of Supernova 2008D
Shock breakout is the earliest, readily-observable emission from a
core-collapse supernova explosion. Observing supernova shock breakout may yield
information about the nature of the supernova shock prior to exiting the
progenitor and, in turn, about the core-collapse supernova mechanism itself.
X-ray Outburst 080109, later associated with SN 2008D, is a very well-observed
example of shock breakout from a core-collapse supernova. Despite excellent
observational coverage and detailed modeling, fundamental information about the
shock breakout, such as the radius of breakout and driver of the light curve
time scale, is still uncertain. The models constructed for explaining the shock
breakout emission from SN 2008D all assume spherical symmetry. We present a
study of the observational characteristics of {\it aspherical} shock breakout
from stripped-envelope core-collapse supernovae. We conduct two-dimensional,
jet-driven supernova simulations from stripped-envelope progenitors and
calculate the resulting shock breakout X-ray spectra and light curves. The
X-ray spectra evolve significantly in time as the shocks expand outward and are
not well-fit by single-temperature and radius black bodies. The time scale of
the X-ray burst light curve of the shock breakout is related to the shock
crossing time of the progenitor, not the much shorter light crossing time that
sets the light curve time scale in spherical breakouts. This could explain the
long shock breakout light curve time scale observed for XRO 080109/SN 2008D.Comment: 16 pages, 29 figures. Accepted to Ap
Double-peaked Oxygen Lines Are not Rare in Nebular Spectra of Core-Collapse Supernovae
Double-peaked oxygen lines in the nebular spectra of two peculiar Type Ib/c
Supernovae (SN Ib/c) have been interpreted as off-axis views of a GRB-jet or
unipolar blob ejections. Here we present late-time spectra of 8 SN IIb, Ib and
Ic and show that this phenomenon is common and should not be so firmly linked
to extraordinary explosion physics. The line profiles are most likely caused by
ejecta expanding with a torus- or disk-like geometry. Double-peaked oxygen
profiles are not necessarily the indicator of a mis-directed GRB jet.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, emulateapj, v2: accepted ApJ Letters versio
The Calibration of the Swift/UVOT Optical Observations: A Recipe for Photometry
Swift/UVOT has the capability to provide critical insight into the physics of
the early afterglows of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). But without precise
calibration of the UVOT to standard photometric systems, it is impossible to
leverage late- time, ground-based follow-up data to the early-time UVOT
observations. In this paper, we present a calibration of the Swift/UVOT
photometry to the standard Johnson UBV system for the UVOT UBV filters,and a
step-by-step photometry recipe for analyzing these data. We base our analysis
on aperture photometry performed on the ground-based and UVOT observations of
the local standard stars in the fields of supernovae (SNe) 2005am and 2005cf,
and a number of Landolt standard stars.We find that the optimal photometry
aperture radius for UVOT data is small (2".5 for unbinned data,3".0 for 2X2
binned data),and show that the coincidence- loss (C-loss) correction is
important even for relatively faint magnitudes (mag 16 to 19). Based on a
theoretically motivated model,we fit the C-loss correction with two parameters,
the photometric zero point (ZP) and the saturation magnitude (m_inf), and
derive tight constraints for both parameters [sigma(ZP) = 0.01 mag and
sigma(m_inf) = 0.02 mag)].We find that the color term correction is not
necessary for the UVOT B and V filters,but is necessary for the U filter for
blue objects [(U - V) < 0.4 mag]. We also apply our calibration results to the
UVOT observations of GRB 050603. There is a scatter of ~0.04--0.08 mag in our
final UVOT photometry, the cause of which is unclear, but may be partly due to
the spatial variation in the pixel sensitivity of the UVOT detector.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP (2006 Jan issue). Significantly
improved version with many more standard stars. A high resolution version can
be found at http://astron.berkeley.edu/~weidong/uvot_calib.ps.g
Characteristic velocities of stripped-envelope core-collapse supernova cores
The velocity of the inner ejecta of stripped-envelope core-collapse
supernovae (CC-SNe) is studied by means of an analysis of their nebular
spectra. Stripped-envelope CC-SNe are the result of the explosion of bare cores
of massive stars ( M), and their late-time spectra are
typically dominated by a strong [O {\sc i}] 6300, 6363 emission
line produced by the innermost, slow-moving ejecta which are not visible at
earlier times as they are located below the photosphere. A characteristic
velocity of the inner ejecta is obtained for a sample of 56 stripped-envelope
CC-SNe of different spectral types (IIb, Ib, Ic) using direct measurements of
the line width as well as spectral fitting. For most SNe, this value shows a
small scatter around 4500 km s. Observations ( days) of
stripped-envelope CC-SNe have revealed a subclass of very energetic SNe, termed
broad-lined SNe (BL-SNe) or hypernovae, which are characterised by broad
absorption lines in the early-time spectra, indicative of outer ejecta moving
at very high velocity (). SNe identified as BL in the early phase
show large variations of core velocities at late phases, with some having much
higher and some having similar velocities with respect to regular CC-SNe. This
might indicate asphericity of the inner ejecta of BL-SNe, a possibility we
investigate using synthetic three-dimensional nebular spectra.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, MNRAS accepte
The Lick Observatory Supernova Search
We report here the current status of the Lick Observatory Supernova Search
(LOSS) with the Katman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT). The progress on both
the hardware and the software of the system is described, and we present a list
of recent discoveries. LOSS is the world' most successful search engine for
nearby supernovae.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to the proceedings of the 10th Annual
October Astrophysics Conference in Maryland on Cosmic Explosion
Strongly Variable z=1.48 FeII and MgII Absorption in the Spectra of z=4.05 GRB 060206
We report on the discovery of strongly variable FeII and MgII absorption
lines seen at z=1.48 in the spectra of the z=4.05 GRB 060206 obtained between
4.13 to 7.63 hours (observer frame) after the burst. In particular, the FeII
line equivalent width (EW) decayed rapidly from 1.72+-0.25 AA to 0.28+-0.21 AA,
only to increase to 0.96+-0.21 AA in a later date spectrum. The MgII doublet
shows even more complicated evolution: the weaker line of the doublet drops
from 2.05+-0.25 AA to 0.92+-0.32 AA, but then more than doubles to 2.47+-0.41
AA in later data. The ratio of the EWs for the MgII doublet is also variable,
being closer to 1:1 (saturated regime) when the lines are stronger and becoming
closer to 2:1 (unsaturated regime) when the lines are weaker, consistent with
expectations based on atomic physics. We have investigated and rejected the
possibility of any instrumental or atmospheric effects causing the observed
strong variations. Our discovery of clearly variable intervening FeII and MgII
lines lends very strong support to their scenario, in which the characteristic
size of intervening patches of MgII ``clouds'' is comparable to the GRB beam
size, i.e, about 10^16 cm. We discuss various implications of this discovery,
including the nature of the MgII absorbers, the physics of GRBs, and
measurements of chemical abundances from GRB and quasar absorption lines.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; ApJ Letters, accepte
Probing the Magnetic Field at Sub-Parsec Radii in the Accretion Disk of NGC 4258
We present an analysis of polarimetric observations at 22 GHz of the water
vapor masers in NGC 4258 obtained with the VLA and the GBT. We do not detect
any circular polarization in the spectrum indicative of Zeeman-induced
splitting of the maser lines of water, a non-paramagnetic molecule. We have
improved the 1-sigma upper limit estimate on the toroidal component of the
magnetic field in the circumnuclear disk of NGC 4258 at a radius of 0.2 pc from
300 mG to 90 mG. We have developed a new method for the analysis of spectra
with blended features and derive a 1-sigma upper limit of 30 mG on the radial
component of the magnetic field at a radius of 0.14 pc. Assuming thermal and
magnetic pressure balance, we estimate an upper limit on the mass accretion
rate of ~10^(-3.7) M_sun/yr for a total magnetic field of less than 130 mG. We
discuss the ramifications of our results on current maser models proposed to
explain the observed maser emission structure and the consequences for current
accretion theories. We find from our magnetic field limits that the thin-disk
model and the jet-disk model are better candidates for accounting for the
extremely low-luminosity nature of NGC 4258, than models that include
advection-dominated accretion flows.Comment: 20 pages, including 10 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
Multi-color Optical and NIR Light Curves of 64 Stripped-Envelope Core-Collapse Supernovae
We present a densely-sampled, homogeneous set of light curves of 64 low
redshift (z < 0.05) stripped-envelope supernovae (SN of type IIb, Ib, Ic and
Ic-bl). These data were obtained between 2001 and 2009 at the Fred L. Whipple
Observatory (FLWO) on Mt. Hopkins in Arizona, with the optical FLWO 1.2-m and
the near-infrared PAIRITEL 1.3-m telescopes. Our dataset consists of 4543
optical photometric measurements on 61 SN, including a combination of UBVRI,
UBVr'i', and u'BVr'i', and 2142 JHKs near-infrared measurements on 25 SN. This
sample constitutes the most extensive multi-color data set of stripped-envelope
SN to date. Our photometry is based on template-subtracted images to eliminate
any potential host galaxy light contamination. This work presents these
photometric data, compares them with data in the literature, and estimates
basic statistical quantities: date of maximum, color, and photometric
properties. We identify promising color trends that may permit the
identification of stripped-envelope SN subtypes from their photometry alone.
Many of these SN were observed spectroscopically by the CfA SN group, and the
spectra are presented in a companion paper (Modjaz et al. 2014). A thorough
exploration that combines the CfA photometry and spectroscopy of
stripped-envelope core-collapse SN will be presented in a follow-up paper.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figures, 8 tables. Revised version resubmitted to ApJ
Supplements after referee report. Additional online material is available
through http://cosmo.nyu.edu/SNYU
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