80 research outputs found

    New approaches to SNe Ia progenitors

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    Although Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are a major tool in cosmology and play a key role in the chemical evolution of galaxies, the nature of their progenitor systems (apart from the fact that they must contain at least one white dwarf, that explodes) remains largely unknown. In the last decade, considerable efforts have been made, both observationally and theoretically, to solve this problem. Observations have, however, revealed a previously unsuspected variety of events, ranging from very underluminous outbursts to clearly overluminous ones, and spanning a range well outside the peak luminosity--decline rate of the light curve relationship, used to make calibrated candles of the SNe Ia. On the theoretical side, new explosion scenarios, such as violent mergings of pairs of white dwarfs, have been explored. We review those recent developments, emphasizing the new observational findings, but also trying to tie them to the different scenarios and explosion mechanisms proposed thus far.Comment: 63 pages, 9 figures, final version to appear as an invited review in New Astronomy Review

    ¿Es el Universo procesual? ¿Es su realidad estructural? Consideraciones metafísicas

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    Presentamos una discusión sobre las filosofías del devenir, del proceso y su ontología y reflexionamos sobre el lugar que una filosofía del cosmos tendría en ellas. ¿Es el Universo una estructura, un proceso? Si es proceso, ¿es determinista, como se sostiene desde el punto de vista de la teoría del universo bloque? Hacemos un repaso de ciertas corrientes incluyendo la del último Zubiri, y su dinamismo estructural bien informado desde la cosmología  de su tiempo. Traemos a colación esta vertiente estructuralista en el debate filosófico del siglo XXI

    The Hubble constant from 56^{56}Co-powered Nebular Candles

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    Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), produced by the thermonuclear explosion of white dwarf (WD) stars, are used here to derive extragalactic distances and an estimate of the Hubble constant from their emission signatures at late phases ({\it Nebular SNe Ia Method}, NSM). The method, first developed in Ruiz--Lapuente \& Lucy (1992), makes use here of an improved modeling of the forbidden line emission at late phases. Hydrodynamic models of the explosion of WDs of different masses, both sub--Chandrasekhar and Chandrasekhar, provide the basis for comparison with the observations. It is shown that it is possible to probe the overall density structure of the ejecta and the mass of the exploding WD by the effect that the electron density profile has in shaping the forbidden line emission of the iron ions, and that a robust diagnostic of the mass of the exploding WD can be obtained. Cosmic distance scale can thus be related to basic diagnostics of excitation of iron lines. Once the most adequate model is selected, comparison of the predicted line emission at these phases with the observed spectra gives an internal estimate of both the reddening and the distance to the SNe Ia. The results presented here favor denser models than those corresponding to sub--Chandrasekhar explosions. From a sample of seven SNe Ia in Leo, Virgo, Fornax and beyond, a value of the Hubble constant H0=68 ±6 (stat)±7 (syst) km s1 Mpc1H_{0} = 68 \ \pm 6\ (stat) \pm 7\ (syst)\ km\ s^{-1}\ Mpc^{-1} is derived. The depth of the Virgo cluster is found to be large, ranging from 13 to 23 Mpc at least. If NGC 4526 traces well the core of the Virgo Cluster, then the latter is located at 16±2 Mpc16\pm 2 \ Mpc. The galaxy NGC 3267 in Leo appears to be located at 9.8 ±\pm 1.5 Mpc.Comment: 17 pages, including 2 figures. uuencoded, gzipped ps file. Submitted to the ApJ (Letters

    Cosmic expansion history from SNe Ia data via information field theory -- the charm code

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    We present charm (cosmic history agnostic reconstruction method), a novel inference algorithm that reconstructs the cosmic expansion history as encoded in the Hubble parameter H(z)H(z) from SNe Ia data. The novelty of the approach lies in the usage of information field theory, a statistical field theory that is very well suited for the construction of optimal signal recovery algorithms. The charm algorithm infers non-parametrically s(a)=ln(ρ(a)/ρcrit0)s(a)=\ln(\rho(a)/\rho_{\mathrm{crit}0}), the density evolution which determines H(z)H(z), without assuming an analytical form of ρ(a)\rho(a) but only its smoothness with the scale factor a=(1+z)1a=(1+z)^{-1}. The inference problem of recovering the signal s(a)s(a) from the data is formulated in a fully Bayesian way. In detail, we have rewritten the signal as the sum of a background cosmology and a perturbation. This allows us to determine the maximum a posteriory estimate of the signal by an iterative Wiener filter method. Applying charm to the Union2.1 supernova compilation, we have recovered a cosmic expansion history that is fully compatible with the standard Λ\LambdaCDM cosmological expansion history with parameter values consistent with the results of the Planck mission

    No surviving evolved companions to the progenitor of supernova SN 1006

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    Type Ia supernovae are thought to occur as a white dwarf made of carbon and oxygen accretes sufficient mass to trigger a thermonuclear explosion1^{1}. The accretion could occur slowly from an unevolved (main-sequence) or evolved (subgiant or giant) star2,3^{2,3}, that being dubbed the single-degenerate channel, or rapidly as it breaks up a smaller orbiting white dwarf (the double- degenerate channel)3,4^{3,4}. Obviously, a companion will survive the explosion only in the single-degenerate channel5^{5}. Both channels might contribute to the production of type Ia supernovae6,7^{6,7} but their relative proportions still remain a fundamental puzzle in astronomy. Previous searches for remnant companions have revealed one possible case for SN 15728,9^{8,9}, though that has been criticized10^{10}. More recently, observations have restricted surviving companions to be small, main-sequence stars11,12,13^{11,12,13}, ruling out giant companions, though still allowing the single-degenerate channel. Here we report the result of a search for surviving companions to the progenitor of SN 100614^{14}. None of the stars within 4' of the apparent site of the explosion is associated with the supernova remnant, so we can firmly exclude all giant and subgiant companions to the progenitor. Combined with the previous results, less than 20 per cent of type Iae occur through the single degenerate channel.Comment: Published as a letter in Nature (2012 September 27

    The origin of the cosmic gamma-ray background in the MeV range

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    There has been much debate about the origin of the diffuse γ\gamma--ray background in the MeV range. At lower energies, AGNs and Seyfert galaxies can explain the background, but not above \simeq0.3 MeV. Beyond \sim10 MeV blazars appear to account for the flux observed. That leaves an unexplained gap for which different candidates have been proposed, including annihilations of WIMPS. One candidate are Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). Early studies concluded that they were able to account for the γ\gamma--ray background in the gap, while later work attributed a significantly lower contribution to them. All those estimates were based on SN Ia explosion models which did not reflect the full 3D hydrodynamics of SNe Ia explosions. In addition, new measurements obtained since 2010 have provided new, direct estimates of high-z SNe Ia rates beyond zz\sim2. We take into account these new advances to see the predicted contribution to the gamma--ray background. We use here a wide variety of explosion models and a plethora of new measurements of SNe Ia rates. SNe Ia still fall short of the observed background. Only for a fit, which would imply \sim150\% systematic error in detecting SNe Ia events, do the theoretical predictions approach the observed fluxes. This fit is, however, at odds at the highest redshifts with recent SN Ia rates estimates. Other astrophysical sources such as FSRQs do match the observed flux levels in the MeV regime, while SNe Ia make up to 30--50\% of the observed flux.Comment: 40 pages, 13 Figures, accepted to be published in Ap

    Estimating the rate and luminosity function of all classes of GRBs

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    The aim of the present work is to estimate the rate and luminosity functions of short, intermediate and long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) by fitting their intensity distributions wih parameterized explosion rates and luminosity functions. The results show that the parameters of the rate and luminosity function for long GRBs can be calculated with an accuracy of 10-30%. However, some parameters of intermediate and short GRBs have large uncertainties. An important conclusion is that there was initially a large outburst in the frequency of long GRBs, and consequently a large outburst in the star-formation rate, if they come from collapsars. Finally, a simulated intensity distribution has been constructed to test the ability of the method to recover the simulated parameters.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Tycho Brahe's supernova: light from centuries past

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    The light curve of SN 1572 is described in the terms used nowadays to characterize SNeIa. By assembling the records of the observations done in 1572--74 and evaluating their uncertainties, it is possible to recover the light curve and the color evolution of this supernova. It is found that, within the SNe Ia family, the event should have been a SNIa with a normal rate of decline, its stretch factor being {\it s} \sim 0.9. Visual light curve near maximum, late--time decline and the color evolution sustain this conclusion. After correcting for extinction, the luminosity of this supernova is found to be MV_{V} == --19.58 --5 log (D/3.5 kpc) ±\pm 0.42.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables. submitted to ApJ (Main Journal
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