1,121 research outputs found
A Deep Chandra Observation of Kepler's Supernova Remnant: A Type Ia Event with Circumstellar Interaction
We present initial results of a 750 ks Chandra observation of the remnant of
Kepler's supernova of AD 1604. The strength and prominence of iron emission,
together with the absence of O-rich ejecta, demonstrate that Kepler resulted
from a thermonuclear supernova, even though evidence for circumstellar
interaction is also strong. We have analyzed spectra of over 100 small regions,
and find that they fall into three classes. (1) The vast majority show Fe L
emission between 0.7 and 1 keV and Si and S K alpha emission; we associate
these with shocked ejecta. A few of these are found at or beyond the mean blast
wave radius. (2) A very few regions show solar O/Fe abundance rations; these we
associate with shocked circumstellar medium (CSM). Otherwise O is scarce. (3) A
few regions are dominated by continuum, probably synchrotron radiation.
Finally, we find no central point source, with a limit about 100 times fainter
than the central object in Cas A. The evidence that the blast wave is
interacting with CSM may indicate a Ia explosion in a more massive progenitor.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letter
Written Speech Feedback in the Basic Communication Course: Are Instructors too Polite?
The present study investigates written performance feedback through the lens of politeness theory. Study 1 examined the types of comments instructors offer to students when they provide written feedback on speeches as well as the relationship between these comments and students\u27 grades.
Results demonstrate that instructors used an overabundance of positive politeness messages and virtually no negative politeness messages. Students who received a higher grade were more likely to receive fewer face threats and more positive politeness messages than those students\u27 who received a lower grade. The results also suggest that instructors are more willing to threaten a students\u27 negative face than their positive face. Study 2 extended the research project by examining students\u27 perceptions of instructor feedback students deem the most helpful. Results indicate that students desire a balance between their grade and the number of positive politeness comments they receive as well as more comments that threaten their face. Students in this study also found specific written feedback as the most helpful type of feedback they received
X-Ray Synchrotron Emitting Fe-Rich Ejecta in SNR RCW 86
Supernova remnants may exhibit both thermal and nonthermal X-ray emission. We
present Chandra observations of RCW 86. Striking differences in the morphology
of X-rays below 1 keV and above 2 keV point to a different physical origin.
Hard X-ray emission is correlated fairly well with the edges of regions of
radio emission, suggesting that these are the locations of shock waves at which
both short-lived X-ray emitting electrons, and longer-lived radio-emitting
electrons, are accelerated. Soft X-rays are spatially well-correlated with
optical emission from nonradiative shocks, which are almost certainly portions
of the outer blast wave. These soft X-rays are well fit with simple thermal
plane-shock models. Harder X-rays show Fe K alpha emission and are well
described with a similar soft thermal component, but a much stronger
synchrotron continuum dominating above 2 keV, and a strong Fe K alpha line.
Quantitative analysis of this line and the surrounding continuum shows that it
cannot be produced by thermal emission from a cosmic-abundance plasma; the
ionization time is too short, as shown both by the low centroid energy (6.4
keV) and the absence of oxygen lines below 1 keV. Instead, a model of a plane
shock into Fe-rich ejecta, with a synchrotron continuum, provides a natural
explanation. This requires that reverse shocks into ejecta be accelerating
electrons to energies of order 50 TeV. We show that maximum energies of this
order can be produced by radiation-limited diffusive shock acceleration at the
reverse shocks.Comment: ApJ, accepted; full resolution images in
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/rho/rcw86chandra.p
Dense, Fe-rich Ejecta in Supernova Remnants DEM L238 and DEM L249: A New Class of Type Ia Supernova?
We present observations of two LMC supernova remnants (SNRs), DEM L238 and
DEM L249, with the Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray satellites. Bright central
emission, surrounded by a faint shell, is present in both remnants. The central
emission has an entirely thermal spectrum dominated by strong Fe L-shell lines,
with the deduced Fe abundance in excess of solar and not consistent with the
LMC abundance. This Fe overabundance leads to the conclusion that DEM L238 and
DEM L249 are remnants of thermonuclear (Type Ia) explosions. The shell emission
originates in gas swept up and heated by the blast wave. A standard Sedov
analysis implies about 50 solar masses in both swept-up shells, SNR ages
between 10,000 and 15,000 yr, low (< 0.05 cm^-3) preshock densities, and
subluminous explosions with energies of 3x10^50 ergs. The central Fe-rich
supernova ejecta are close to collisional ionization equilibrium. Their
presence is unexpected, because standard Type Ia SNR models predict faint
ejecta emission with short ionization ages. Both SNRs belong to a previously
unrecognized class of Type Ia SNRs characterized by bright interior emission.
Denser than expected ejecta and/or a dense circumstellar medium around the
progenitors are required to explain the presence of Fe-rich ejecta in these
SNRs. Substantial amounts of circumstellar gas are more likely to be present in
explosions of more massive Type Ia progenitors. DEM L238, DEM L249, and similar
SNRs could be remnants of ``prompt'' Type Ia explosions with young (~100 Myr
old) progenitors.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, ApJ, in pres
A Spatially Resolved Study of the Synchrotron Emission and Titanium in Tycho's Supernova Remnant with NuSTAR
We report results from deep observations (~750 ks) of Tycho's supernova
remnant (SNR) with NuSTAR. Using these data, we produce narrow-band images over
several energy bands to identify the regions producing the hardest X-rays and
to search for radioactive decay line emission from 44Ti. We find that the
hardest (>10 keV) X-rays are concentrated in the southwest of Tycho, where
recent Chandra observations have revealed high emissivity "stripes" associated
with particles accelerated to the knee of the cosmic-ray spectrum. We do not
find evidence of 44Ti, and we set limits on its presence and distribution
within the SNR. These limits correspond to a upper-limit 44Ti mass of M44 <
2.4x10^-4 M_sun for a distance of 2.3 kpc. We perform spatially resolved
spectroscopic analysis of sixty-six regions across Tycho. We map the best-fit
rolloff frequency of the hard X-ray spectra, and we compare these results to
measurements of the shock expansion and ambient density. We find that the
highest energy electrons are accelerated at the lowest densities and in the
fastest shocks, with a steep dependence of the roll-off frequency with shock
velocity. Such a dependence is predicted by models where the maximum energy of
accelerated electrons is limited by the age of the SNR rather than by
synchrotron losses, but this scenario requires far lower magnetic field
strengths than those derived from observations in Tycho. One way to reconcile
these discrepant findings is through shock obliquity effects, and future
observational work is necessary to explore the role of obliquity in the
particle acceleration process.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, ApJ in pres
Broadband X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy of the Crab Nebula and Pulsar with NuSTAR
We present broadband (3 -- 78 keV) NuSTAR X-ray imaging and spectroscopy of
the Crab nebula and pulsar. We show that while the phase-averaged and spatially
integrated nebula + pulsar spectrum is a power-law in this energy band,
spatially resolved spectroscopy of the nebula finds a break at 9 keV in
the spectral photon index of the torus structure with a steepening
characterized by . We also confirm a previously reported
steepening in the pulsed spectrum, and quantify it with a broken power-law with
break energy at 12 keV and . We present spectral
maps of the inner 100\as\ of the remnant and measure the size of the nebula as
a function of energy in seven bands. These results find that the rate of
shrinkage with energy of the torus size can be fitted by a power-law with an
index of , consistent with the predictions of Kennel
and Coroniti (1984). The change in size is more rapid in the NW direction,
coinciding with the counter-jet where we find the index to be a factor of two
larger. NuSTAR observed the Crab during the latter part of a -ray
flare, but found no increase in flux in the 3 - 78 keV energy band
Near-Infrared Synchrotron Emission from Cas A
High energy observations of Cas A suggested the presence of synchrotron
radiation, implying acceleration of cosmic rays by young supernova remnants. We
detect synchrotron emission from Cas A in the near-infrared using Two Micron
All Sky Survey (2MASS) and Palomar 200 inch PFIRCAM observations. The remnant
is detected in J, H, and Ks bands, with Ks band brightest and J faint. In the J
and H bands, bright [Fe II] lines (1.24um and 1.64um) are detected
spectroscopically. The Palomar observations include Ks continuum, narrow-band
1.64um (centered on [Fe II]) and 2.12um (centered on H2(1-0)) images. While the
narrow-band 1.64um image shows filamentary and knotty structures, similar to
the optical image, the Ks image shows a relatively smooth, diffuse shell,
remarkably similar to the radio image. The broad-band near-infrared fluxes of
Cas A are generally consistent with, but a few tens of percent higher than, an
extrapolation of the radio fluxes. The hardening to higher frequencies is
possibly due to nonlinear shock acceleration and/or spectral index variation
across the remnant. We show evidence of spectral index variation. The presence
of near-infrared synchrotron radiation requires the roll-off frequency to be
higher than 1.5e14 Hz, implying that electrons are accelerated to energies of
at least 0.2 TeV. The morphological similarity in diffuse emission between the
radio and Ks band images implies that synchrotron losses are not dominant. Our
observations show unambiguous evidence that the near-infrared Ks band emission
of Cas A is from synchrotron emission by accelerated cosmic-ray electrons.Comment: accepted by Ap
High-Energy X-ray Imaging of the Pulsar Wind Nebula MSH~15-52: Constraints on Particle Acceleration and Transport
We present the first images of the pulsar wind nebula (PWN) MSH 15-52 in the
hard X-ray band (>8 keV), as measured with the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope
Array (NuSTAR). Overall, the morphology of the PWN as measured by NuSTAR in the
3-7 keV band is similar to that seen in Chandra high-resolution imaging.
However, the spatial extent decreases with energy, which we attribute to
synchrotron energy losses as the particles move away from the shock. The
hard-band maps show a relative deficit of counts in the northern region towards
the RCW 89 thermal remnant, with significant asymmetry. We find that the
integrated PWN spectra measured with NuSTAR and Chandra suggest that there is a
spectral break at 6 keV which may be explained by a break in the
synchrotron-emitting electron distribution at ~200 TeV and/or imperfect cross
calibration. We also measure spatially resolved spectra, showing that the
spectrum of the PWN softens away from the central pulsar B1509-58, and that
there exists a roughly sinusoidal variation of spectral hardness in the
azimuthal direction. We discuss the results using particle flow models. We find
non-monotonic structure in the variation with distance of spectral hardness
within 50" of the pulsar moving in the jet direction, which may imply particle
and magnetic-field compression by magnetic hoop stress as previously suggested
for this source. We also present 2-D maps of spectral parameters and find an
interesting shell-like structure in the NH map. We discuss possible origins of
the shell-like structure and their implications.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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