7 research outputs found
Limits on O VI Emission from the Shocked Circumstellar Gas of SN 1987A
The Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) was used to search for emission from the shock interaction of the ejecta of SN 1987A with its circumstellar material. FUSE observations of SN 1987A between 2000 and 2007 did not detect broad OVI emission. However, OVI emission was detected in 2000-2001 with a narrow line width (FWHM <35 kms t ) and a heliocentric radial velocity of +280 km/s. This places the emitting gas at rest relative to the supernova and is interpreted as emission from unshocked circumstellar gas. This narrow emission had disappeared in 2007 (and possibly earlier) as a result of the advancing shock overtaking the H II region that was flash ionized by the supernova explosion in 1987
Detection of a Hot Binary Companion of Carinae
We report the detection of a hot companion of Carinae using high
resolution spectra (905 - 1180 \AA) obtained with the Far Ultraviolet
Spectroscopic Explorer (\fuse) satellite. Observations were obtained at two
epochs of the 2024-day orbit: 2003 June during ingress to the 2003.5 X-ray
eclipse and 2004 April several months after egress. These data show that
essentially all the far-UV flux from \etacar shortward of \lya disappeared at
least two days before the start of the X-ray eclipse (2003 June 29), implying
that the hot companion, \etaB, was also eclipsed by the dense wind or extended
atmosphere of \etaA. Analysis of the far-UV spectrum shows that \etaB is a
luminous hot star. The \nii \wll1084-1086 emission feature suggests that it may
be nitrogen-rich. The observed far-UV flux levels and spectral features,
combined with the timing of their disappearance, is consistent with \etacar\
being a massive binary system
Physical Conditions in Circumstellar Gas surrounding SN 1987A 12 Years After Outburst
Two-dimensional spectra of Supernova 1987A were obtained on 1998 November
14-15 (4282 days after outburst) with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph
(STIS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The slit sampled portions of
the inner circumstellar ring at the east and west ansae as well as small
sections of both the northern and southern outer rings. The temperature and
density at these locations are estimated by nebular analysis of [N II], [O
III], and [S II] emission line ratios, and with time-dependent
photoionization/recombination models. The results from these two methods are
mutually consistent. The electron density in the inner ring is ~ 4000 cm-3 for
S II, with progressively lower densities for N II and O III. The electron
temperatures determined from [N II] and [O III] line ratios are ~11,000 K and
\~22,000 K, respectively. These results are consistent with evolutionary trends
in the circumstellar gas from similar measurements at earlier epochs. We find
that emission lines from the outer rings come from gas of lower density (n_e
\la 2000 cm-3) than that which emits the same line in the inner ring. The N/O
ratio appears to be the same in all three rings. Our results also suggest that
the CNO abundances in the northern outer ring are the same as in the inner
ring, contrary to earlier results of Panagia et al. (1996). Physical conditions
in the southern outer ring are less certain because of poorer signal-to-noise
data. The STIS spectra also reveal a weak Ha emission redshifted by ~100 km s-1
at p.a. 103\arcdeg that coincides with the recently discovered new regions that
are brightening (Lawrence et al. 2000). This indicates that the shock
interaction in the SE section of the inner ring commenced over a year before it
became apparent in HST images.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, to appear in December 1, 2000 Astrophysical
Journa