347 research outputs found
Chandra and ASCA X-ray Observations of the Radio Supernova SN1979C IN NGC 4321
We report on the X-ray observation of the radio selected supernova SN1979C
carried out with ASCA in 1997 December and serendipitously available from a
Chandra Guaranteed Time Observation in 1999 November. The supernova, of type SN
II-Linear (SN IIL), was first observed in the optical and occurred in the
weakly barred, almost face on spiral galaxy NGC 4321 (M100). The galaxy, a
member of the Virgo S cluster, is at a distance of 17.1 Mpc, and contains at
least three other supernovae discovered in this century. The useful exposure
time was ~25 ks for the Solid-State Imaging Spectrometer (SIS), ~28 ks for the
Gas Scintillation Imaging Spectrometer (GIS), and ~2.5 ks for Chandra's
Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS). No point source was detected at the
radio position of SN1979C in a 3' diameter half power response circle in the
ASCA data. The background and galaxy subtracted SN signal had a 3sigma upper
limit to the flux of 6.3x10^-14 ergs/s/cm^-2 in the full ASCA SIS band
(0.4-10.0 keV) and a 3sigma upper limit of <3-4x10^-14 erg/s/cm^2 in the 2-10
keV band. In the Chandra data, a source at the position of SN1979C is
marginally detected at energies below 2 keV at a flux consistent with the ROSAT
HRI detection in 1995. At energies above 2 keV, no source is detected with an
upper limit of ~3x10^-14 erg/s/cm^-2. These measurements give the first ever
x-ray flux limit of a Type IIL SN above 2 keV which is an important diagnostic
of the outgoing shock wave ploughing through the circumstellar medium.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted A
Physical Properties of the X-ray Luminous SN 1978K in NGC 1313 from Multiwavelength Observations
We update the light curves from the X-ray, optical, and radio bandpasses
which we have assembled over the past decade, and present two observations in
the ultraviolet using the Hubble Space Telescope Faint Object Spectrograph. The
HRI X-ray light curve is constant within the errors over the entire observation
period. This behavior is confirmed in the ASCA GIS data obtained in 1993 and
1995. In the ultraviolet, we detected Ly-alpha, the [Ne IV] 2422/2424 A
doublet, the Mg II doublet at 2800 A, and a line at ~3190 A we attribute to He
I 3187. Only the Mg II and He I lines are detected at SN1978K's position. The
optical light curve is formally constant within the errors, although a slight
upward trend may be present. The radio light curve continues its steep decline.
The longer time span of our radio observations compared to previous studies
shows that SN1978K is in the same class of highly X-ray and radio-luminous
supernovae as SN1986J and SN1988Z. The [Ne IV] emission is spatially distant
from the location of SN1978K and originates in the pre-shocked matter. The Mg
II doublet flux ratio implies the quantity of line optical depth times density
of ~10^14 cm^-3 for its emission region. The emission site must lie in the
shocked gas.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figs; LaTeX with AASTEXv5; paper accepted, scheduled for
AJ, Dec 199
Chandra X-Ray Point Sources, including Supernova 1979C, in the Spiral Galaxy M100
Six x-ray point sources, with luminosities of in the 0.4--7 keV band, were detected in Chandra
observations of the spiral galaxy M100. One source is identified with supernova
SN 1979C and appears to have roughly constant x-ray flux for the period 16--20
years after the outburst. The x-ray spectrum is soft, as would be expected if
the x-ray emission is due to the interaction of supernova ejecta with
circumstellar matter. Most of the other sources are variable either within the
Chandra observation or when compared to archival data. None are coincident with
the peak of the radio emission at the nucleus. These sources have harder
spectra than the supernova and are likely x-ray binaries. M100 has more bright
x-ray sources than typical for spiral galaxies of its size. This is likely
related to active star formation occurring in the galaxy.Comment: accepted by the Astrophysical Journal, 7 page
SN 2007od: A Type IIP SN with Circumstellar Interaction
SN 2007od exhibits characteristics that have rarely been seen in a Type IIP
supernova (SN). Optical V band photometry reveals a very steep brightness
decline between the plateau and nebular phases of ~4.5 mag, likely due to SN
2007od containing a low mass of 56Ni. The optical spectra show an evolution
from normal Type IIP with broad Halpha emission, to a complex, four component
Halpha emission profile exhibiting asymmetries caused by dust extinction after
day 232. This is similar to the spectral evolution of the Type IIn SN 1998S,
although no early-time narrow (~200 km s-1) Halpha component was present in SN
2007od. In both SNe, the intermediate-width Halpha emission components are
thought to arise in the interaction between the ejecta and its circumstellar
medium (CSM). SN 2007od also shows a mid-IR excess due to new dust. The
evolution of the Halpha profile and the presence of the mid-IR excess provide
strong evidence that SN 2007od formed new dust before day 232. Late-time
observations reveal a flattening of the visible lightcurve. This flattening is
a strong indication of the presence of a light echo, which likely accounts for
much of the broad, underlying Halpha component seen at late-times. We believe
the multi-peaked Halpha emission is consistent with the interaction of the
ejecta with a circumstellar ring or torus (for the inner components at \pm1500
km s-1), and a single blob or cloud of circumstellar material out of the plane
of the CSM ring (for the outer component at -5000 km s-1). The most probable
location for the formation of new dust is in the cool dense shell created by
the interaction between the expanding ejecta and its CSM. Monte Carlo radiative
transfer modeling of the dust emission from SN 2007od implies that up to 4x
10-4Msun of new dust has formed. This is similar to the amounts of dust formed
in other CCSNe such as SNe 1999em, 2004et, and 2006jc.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
A Catalog of Candidate Intermediate-luminosity X-ray Objects
ROSAT, and now Chandra, X-ray images allow studies of extranuclear X-ray
point sources in galaxies other than our own. X-ray observations of normal
galaxies with ROSAT and Chandra have revealed that off-nuclear, compact,
Intermediate-luminosity (Lx[2-10 keV] >= 1e39 erg/s) X-ray Objects (IXOs,
a.k.a. ULXs [Ultraluminous X-ray sources]) are quite common. Here we present a
catalog and finding charts for 87 IXOs in 54 galaxies, derived from all of the
ROSAT HRI imaging data for galaxies with cz <= 5000 km/s from the Third
Reference Catalog of Bright Galaxies (RC3). We have defined the cutoff Lx for
IXOs so that it is well above the Eddington luminosity of a 1.4 Msun black hole
(10^38.3 erg/s), so as not to confuse IXOs with ``normal'' black hole X-ray
binaries. This catalog is intended to provide a baseline for follow-up work
with Chandra and XMM, and with space- and ground-based survey work at
wavelengths other than X-ray. We demonstrate that elliptical galaxies with IXOs
have a larger number of IXOs per galaxy than non-elliptical galaxies with IXOs,
and note that they are not likely to be merely high-mass X-ray binaries with
beamed X-ray emission, as may be the case for IXOs in starburst galaxies.
Approximately half of the IXOs with multiple observations show X-ray
variability, and many (19) of the IXOs have faint optical counterparts in DSS
optical B-band images. Follow-up observations of these objects should be
helpful in identifying their nature.Comment: 29 pages, ApJS, accepted (catalog v2.0) (full resolution version of
paper and future releases of catalog at http://www.xassist.org/ixocat_hri
X-ray, Optical, and Radio Observations of the Type II Supernovae 1999em and 1998S
Observations of the Type II-P (plateau) Supernova (SN) 1999em and Type IIn
(narrow emission line) SN 1998S have enabled estimation of the profile of the
SN ejecta, the structure of the circumstellar medium (CSM) established by the
pre-SN stellar wind, and the nature of the shock interaction. SN 1999em is the
first Type II-P detected at both X-ray and radio wavelengths. The Chandra X-ray
data indicate non-radiative interaction of SN ejecta with a power-law density
profile (rho \propto r^{-n} with n ~ 7) with a pre-SN wind with a low mass-loss
rate of ~2 \times 10^{-6} M_sun/yr for a wind velocity of 10 km/sec, in
agreement with radio mass-loss rate estimates. The Chandra data show an
unexpected, temporary rise in the 0.4--2.0 keV X-ray flux at ~100 days after
explosion. SN 1998S, at an age of >3 years, is still bright in X-rays and is
increasing in flux density at cm radio wavelengths. Spectral fits to the
Chandra data show that many heavy elements (Ne, Al, Si, S, Ar, and Fe) are
overabundant with respect to solar values. We compare the observed elemental
abundances and abundance ratios to theoretical calculations and find that our
data are consistent with a progenitor mass of approximately 15-20 M_sun if the
heavy element ejecta are radially mixed out to a high velocity. If the X-ray
emission is from the reverse shock wave region, the supernova density profile
must be moderately flat at a velocity ~10^4 km/sec, the shock front is
non-radiative at the time of the observations, and the mass-loss rate is 1-2
\times 10^{-4} M_sun/yr for a pre-supernova wind velocity of 10 km/sec. This
result is also supported by modeling of the radio emission which implies that
SN 1998S is surrounded by a clumpy or filamentary CSM established by a high
mass-loss rate, ~2 \times 10^{-4} M_sun/yr, from the pre-supernova star.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, accepted by ApJ, includes new data (one new
obs. each of SN 1999em and SN 1998S), expanded discussion of spectral fit
A second glance at SN 2002ap and the M74 field with XMM-Newton
We have re-observed the field of M74 in January 2003 with XMM-Newton, 11
months after the X-ray detection of SN 2002ap. From a comparison of the two
XMM-Newton observations we obtain more accurate values for the X-ray luminosity
and colours of the source five days after the event, and a limit on its decline
rate. We compare its X-ray behaviour (prompt soft X-ray emission, relatively
low luminosity) with that of other Type Ic SNe, and speculate that SN 2002ap
may share some physical properties (low mass-loss rate and high-velocity
stellar wind from the progenitor star) with the candidate hypernova/GRB
progenitor SN 1998bw, but with a lower (non-relativistic) speed of the ejecta.
We suggest that the X-ray emission observed in 2002 is likely to come from the
radiatively-cooling reverse shock, at a temperature kT ~ 0.8 keV, and that this
soft component was already detected 5 d after the event because the absorbing
column density of the cool shell between the forward and reverse shocks was
only ~ 10^{20} cm^{-2}, ie, the shell was optically thin in the soft X-ray
band. The new XMM-Newton data also allowed us to continue monitoring two bright
variable sources in M74 that had reached peak luminosities > 10^{39} erg s^{-1}
in previous XMM-Newton and Chandra observations. Finally, we used two Chandra
observations from 2001 to investigate the luminosity and colour distribution of
the X-ray source population of M74, typical of moderately-active late-type
spirals.Comment: 13 pages, A&A, in press. Revised version with an expanded discussion
of the X-ray behaviour of SN2002a
Modeling the ascent of sounding balloons: derivation of the vertical air motion
A new model to describe the ascent of sounding balloons in the troposphere and lower stratosphere (up to &sim;30–35 km altitude) is presented. Contrary to previous models, detailed account is taken of both the variation of the drag coefficient with altitude and the heat imbalance between the balloon and the atmosphere. To compensate for the lack of data on the drag coefficient of sounding balloons, a reference curve for the relationship between drag coefficient and Reynolds number is derived from a dataset of flights launched during the Lindenberg Upper Air Methods Intercomparisons (LUAMI) campaign. The transfer of heat from the surrounding air into the balloon is accounted for by solving the radial heat diffusion equation inside the balloon. In its present state, the model does not account for solar radiation, i.e. it is only able to describe the ascent of balloons during the night. It could however be adapted to also represent daytime soundings, with solar radiation modeled as a diffusive process. The potential applications of the model include the forecast of the trajectory of sounding balloons, which can be used to increase the accuracy of the match technique, and the derivation of the air vertical velocity. The latter is obtained by subtracting the ascent rate of the balloon in still air calculated by the model from the actual ascent rate. This technique is shown to provide an approximation for the vertical air motion with an uncertainty error of 0.5 m s<sup>&minus;1</sup> in the troposphere and 0.2 m s<sup>&minus;1</sup> in the stratosphere. An example of extraction of the air vertical velocity is provided in this paper. We show that the air vertical velocities derived from the balloon soundings in this paper are in general agreement with small-scale atmospheric velocity fluctuations related to gravity waves, mechanical turbulence, or other small-scale air motions measured during the SUCCESS campaign (Subsonic Aircraft: Contrail and Cloud Effects Special Study) in the orographically unperturbed mid-latitude middle troposphere
Late-Time Optical and UV Spectra of SN 1979C and SN 1980K
A low-dispersion Keck I spectrum of SN 1980K taken in August 1995 (t = 14.8
yr after explosion) and a November 1997 MDM spectrum (t = 17.0 yr) show broad
5500 km s^{-1} emission lines of H\alpha, [O I] 6300,6364 A, and [O II]
7319,7330 A. Weaker but similarly broad lines detected include [Fe II] 7155 A,
[S II] 4068,4072 A, and a blend of [Fe II] lines at 5050--5400 A. The presence
of strong [S II] 4068,4072 A emission but a lack of [S II] 6716,6731 A emission
suggests electron densities of 10^{5-6} cm^{-3}. From the 1997 spectra, we
estimate an H\alpha flux of 1.3 \pm 0.2 \times 10^{-15} erg cm^{-2} s^{-1}
indicating a 25% decline from 1987--1992 levels during the period 1994 to 1997,
possibly related to a reported decrease in its nonthermal radio emission.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, submitted to the Astronomical Journa
A Radio and X-Ray Study of Historical Supernovae in M83
We report the results of 15 years of radio observations of the six historical
supernovae (SNe) in M83 using the Very Large Array. We note the near linear
decline in radio emission from SN 1957D, a type II SN, which remains a
non-thermal radio emitter. The measured flux densities from SNe 1923A and 1950B
have flattened as they begin to fade below detectable limits, also type II SNe.
The luminosities for these three SNe are comparable with the radio luminosities
of other decades-old SNe at similar epochs. SNe 1945B, 1968L, and 1983N were
not detected in the most recent observations and these non-detections are
consistent with previous studies. We report the X-ray non-detections of all six
historical SNe using the Chandra X-ray Observatory, consistent with previous
X-ray searches of other decades-old SNe, and low inferred mass loss rates of
the progenitors.Comment: 3 color ps figure
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