215 research outputs found
The Radio Recovery of SN 1970G: The Continuing Radio Evolution of SN 1970G
Using the Very Large Array, we have detected radio emission from the site of
SN 1970G in the Sc galaxy M101. These observations are 31 years after the
supernova event, making SN 1970G the longest monitored radio supernova. With
flux densities of 0.12 +/- 0.020 mJy at 6 cm and 0.16 +/- 0.015 mJy at 20 cm,
the spectral index of -0.24 +/- 0.20 appears to have flattened somewhat when
compared with the previously reported value of -0.56 +/- 0.11, taken in 1990.
The radio emission at 20 cm has decayed since the 1990 observations with a
power-law index of beta_20cm = -0.28 +/- 0.13. We discuss the radio properties
of this source and compare them to those of other Type II radio supernovae.Comment: 11 pages, 1 table and 2 figures; To appear in Astrophysical Journal
Letter
Radio Observations of SN 1980K: Evidence for Rapid Presupernova Evolution
New observations of SN 1980K made with the VLA at 20 and 6 cm from 1994 April
through 1996 October show that the supernova (SN) has undergone a significant
change in its radio emission evolution, dropping by a factor of ~2 below the
flux density S \propto t^{-0.73} power-law decline with time t observed
earlier. However, although S at all observed frequencies has decreased
significantly, its current spectral index of \alpha= -0.42\pm0.15 (S \propto
\nu^{+\alpha}) is consistent with the previous spectral index of
\alpha=-0.60_{-0.07}^{+0.04}.
It is suggested that this decrease in emission may be due to the SN shock
entering a new region of the circumstellar material which has a lower density
than that expected for a constant speed (w), constant mass-loss rate (Mdot)
wind from the progenitor. If such an interpretation is correct, the difference
in wind and shock speeds appears to indicate a significant evolution in the
mass-loss history of the SN progenitor ~10^4 years before explosion, with a
change in circumstellar density (\propto Mdot/w) occurring over a time span of
\lesssim 4 kyr. Such features could be explained in terms of a fast
``blue-loop'' evolutionary phase of a relatively massive pre-SN progenitor
star. If so, we may, for the first time, provide a stringent constraint on the
mass of the SN progenitor based solely on the SN's radio emission.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Ap
Cosmological Constant, Conical Defect and Classical Tests of General Relativity
We investigate the perihelion shift of the planetary motion and the bending
of starlight in the Schwarzschild field modified by the presence of a
-term plus a conical defect. This analysis generalizes an earlier
result obtained by Islam (Phys. Lett. A 97, 239, 1983) to the case of a pure
cosmological constant. By using the experimental data we obtain that the
parameter characterizing the conical defect is less than
and , respectively, on the length scales associated with such
phenomena. In particular, if the defect is generated by a cosmic string, these
values correspond to limits on the linear mass densities of and
, respectively.Comment: 9 pages, no figures, revte
Recent Type II Radio Supernovae
We present the results of radio observations, taken primarily with the Very
Large Array, of Supernovae 1993J, 2001gd, 2001em, 2002hh, 2004dj, and 2004et.
We have fit a parameterized model to the multi-frequency observations of each
supernova. We compare the observed and derived radio properties of these
supernovae by optical classification and discuss the implications.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 table Conference Proceedings: "Supernova 1987A:
20 Years After: Supernovae and Gamma-Ray Bursters" AIP, New York, eds. S.
Immler, K.W. Weiler, and R. McCra
The Nuclear Spectral Energy Distribution of NGC 4395, The Least Luminous Type 1 Seyfert Galaxy
We present X-ray (ROSAT), infrared, and radio observations of NGC 4395, which
harbors the optically least luminous type 1 Seyfert nucleus discovered thus
far. In combination with published optical and ultraviolet spectra, we have
used these data to assemble the broadband spectral energy distribution (SED) of
the galaxy's nucleus. Interestingly, the SED of NGC 4395 differs markedly from
the SEDs of both quasars and typical low-luminosity active galactic nuclei,
which may be a manifestation of the different physical conditions (i.e., black
hole masses, accretion rates, and/or accretion modes) that exist in these
objects. The nuclear X-ray source in NGC 4395 is variable and has an observed
luminosity of just ~ 10^38 ergs/s. Although this emission could plausibly be
associated with either a weak active nucleus or a bright stellar-mass binary
system, the optical and ultraviolet emission-line properties of the nucleus
strongly suggest that the X-rays arise from a classical AGN.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP (July 1999), 17 pages, including 4
Postscript figure
23 GHz VLBI Observations of SN 2008ax
We report on phase-referenced 23 GHz Very-Long-Baseline-Interferometry (VLBI)
observations of the type IIb supernova SN 2008ax, made with the Very Long
Baseline Array (VLBA) on 2 April 2008 (33 days after explosion). These
observations resulted in a marginal detection of the supernova. The total flux
density recovered from our VLBI image is 0.80.3 mJy (one standard
deviation). As it appears, the structure may be interpreted as either a
core-jet or a double source. However, the supernova structure could be somewhat
confused with a possible close by noise peak. In such a case, the recovered
flux density would decrease to 0.480.12 mJy, compatible with the flux
densities measured with the VLA at epochs close in time to our VLBI
observations. The lowest average expansion velocities derived from our
observations are km s (case of a double
source) and km s (taking the weaker source
component as a spurious, close by, noise peak, which is the more likely
interpretation). These velocities are 7.3 and 2 times higher, respectively,
than the maximum ejecta velocity inferred from optical-line observations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted in A&A on 24/03/200
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