575 research outputs found
Lack of observational evidence for quantum structure of space-time at Plank scales
It has been noted (Lieu & Hillmann, 2002) that the cumulative affect of
Planck-scale phenomenology, or the structure of space-time at extremely small
scales, can be lead to the loss of phase of radiation emitted at large
distances from the observer. We elaborate on such an approach and demonstrate
that such an effect would lead to an apparent blurring of distant
point-sources. Evidence of the diffraction pattern from the HST observations of
SN 1994D and the unresolved appearance of a Hubble Deep Field galaxy at z=5.34
lead us to put stringent limits on the effects of Planck-scale phenomenology.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepter for ApJ
The Asiago Supernova Catalogue- 10 years after
Ten years after the publication of the previous release, we present a new
edition of the Asiago Supernova Catalogue updated to December 31, 1998 and
containing data for 1447 supernovae and their parent galaxies\footnote{Tables 1
and 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to
cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html}. In addition to list the data for a
large number of new SNe, we made an effort to search the literature for new
information on past SNe as well. We also tried to update and homogenize the
data for the parent galaxies. To allow a global view of the Catalogue, a few
descriptive figures and a summary table is reported. The present Catalogue is
intended as a large and modern database for statistical studies on the
supernova phenomenon.Comment: 6 pages. To be published in A&A supplement. Enclosed as postscript
files are the full lists in chronological (snean.ps) and R.A. (snear.ps)
order (to be published only in electronic form.
The 3-D ionization structure and evolution of NGC 7009 (Saturn Nebula)
Tomographic and 3-D analyses for extended, emission-line objects are applied
to long-slit ESO NTT + EMMI high-resolution spectra of the intriguing planetary
nebula NGC 7009, covered at twelve position angles. We derive the gas expansion
law, the diagnostics and ionic radial profiles, the distance and the central
star parameters, the nebular photo-ionization model and the spatial recovery of
the plasma structure and evolution. The Saturn Nebula (distance~1.4 kpc,
age~6000 yr, ionized mass~0.18 Mo) consists of several interconnected
components, characterized by different morphology, physical conditions,
excitation and kinematics. The internal shell, the main shell, the streams and
the ansae expand at V(exp)~4.0xR" km/s, the outer shell, the caps and the
equatorial pseudo-ring at V(exp)~3.15xR" km/s, and the halo at V(exp)~10 km/s.
We compare the radial distribution of the physical conditions and the line
fluxes observed in the eight sub-systems with the theoretical profiles coming
from the photo-ionization code CLOUDY, inferring that all the spectral
characteristics of NGC 7009 are explainable in terms of photo-ionization by the
central star, a hot (logT*~4.95) and luminous (log L*/Lo~3.70) 0.60--0.61 Mo
post--AGB star in the hydrogen-shell nuclear burning phase. The 3--D shaping of
the Saturn Nebula is discussed within an evolutionary scenario dominated by
photo-ionization and supported by the fast stellar wind: it begins with the
superwind ejection, passes through the neutral, transition phase (lasting ~
3000 yr), the ionization start (occurred ~2000 yr ago), and the full ionization
of the main shell (~1000 yr ago), at last reaching the present days: the whole
nebula is optically thin to the UV stellar flux, except the caps and the ansae.Comment: accepted for pub. in A&A, 28 pages, 14 figures, full text with
figures available at http://web.pd.astro.it/supern/ps/h4665.ps, movies on the
3D structure available at http://web.pd.astro.it/sabbadin
The present rate of Supernovae
We present and discuss the most recent determination of the rate of
Supernovae in the local Universe. A comparison with other results shows a
general agreement on the gross values but still significant differences on the
values of the rates of various SN rates in different kinds of galaxies. The
rate of SNe, used as a probe of Star Formation, confirms the young progenitor
scenario for SNII+Ib/c. The increasing diversity of SNe reflects also in the SN
yields which may affect the chemical evolution of the Galaxy but, because of
the limited statistics, we cannot estimate the contributions of the new
subtypes yet. It is also expected that in a few years observational
determinations of the SN rates at various look-back times will be available.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, 1 figure, To appear in the proceedings of the
conference "The Chemical Evolution of The Milky Way: Stars versus Clusters",
eds. F. Matteucci and F. Giovannelli, Vulcano, Italy, September 20-24 199
Bolometric light curves of supernovae and post-explosion magnetic fields
The various effects leading to diversity in the bolometric light curves of
supernovae are examined: nucleosynthesis, kinematic differences, ejected mass,
degree of mixing, and configuration and intensity of the magnetic field are
discussed. In Type Ia supernovae, a departure in the bolometric light curve
from the full-trapping decline of Co can occur within the two and a half
years after the explosion, depending on the evolutionary path followed by the
WD during the accretion phase. If convection has developed in the WD core
during the presupernova evolution, starting several thousand years before the
explosion, a tangled magnetic field close to the equipartition value should
have grown in the WD. Such an intense magnetic field would confine positrons
where they originate from the Co decays, and preclude a strong departure
from the full-trapping decline, as the supernova expands. This situation is
expected to occur in C+O Chandrasekhar WDs as opposed to edge-lit detonated
sub-Chandrasekhar WDs. If the pre-explosion magnetic field of the WD is less
intense than 10G, a lack of confinement of the positrons emitted in the
Co decay and a departure from full-trapping decline would occur. The
time at which it takes place can provide estimates of the original magnetic
field of the WD, its configuration, and also of the mass of the supernova
ejecta. In SN 1991bg, the bolometric light curve suggests absence of a
significant tangled magnetic field (intensity lower than G).
Chandrasekhar-mass models do not reproduce the bolometric light curve of this
supernova. For SN 1972E, on the contrary, there is evidence for a tangled
configuration of the magnetic field and its light curve is well reproduced by a
Chandrasekhar WD explosion.Comment: 54 pages, including 8 figures. To appear in Ap
VLT Spectropolarimetry of the optical transient in NGC300. Evidence for asymmetry in the circumstellar dust
AIMS: The main goal of this work is to study possible signs of asymmetry in
the bright optical transient in NGC300, with the aim of getting independent
information on the explosion mechanism, the progenitor star and its
circumstellar environment.
METHODS: Using VLT-FORS1 we have obtained low-resolution optical linear
spectropolarimetry of NGC300 OT2008-1 on two epochs, 48 and 55 days after the
discovery, covering the spectral range 3600--9330A.
RESULTS: The data show a continuum polarization at a very significant level.
At least two separate components are identified. The first is characterized by
a strong wavelength dependency and a constant position angle (68.6+/-0.3
degrees), which is parallel to the local spiral arm of the host galaxy. The
second shows a completely different position angle (151.3+/-0.4) and displays a
mild but statistically significant evolution between the two epochs. While the
former is identified as arising in the interstellar dust associated with
NGC300, the latter is most likely due to continuum polarization by dust
scattering in the circumstellar environment. No line depolarization is detected
in correspondence of the most intense emission lines, disfavoring electron
scattering as the source of intrinsic polarization. This implies a very small
deviation from symmetry in the continuum-forming region. Given the observed
level of intrinsic polarization, the transient must be surrounded by a
significant amount of dust (>4x10^-5 Msun), asymmetrically distributed within a
few thousand AU. This most likely implies that one or more asymmetric outflow
episodes took place during the past history of the progenitor.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 16 pages, 16
figure
Detecting Extrasolar Planets with Integral Field Spectroscopy
Observations of extrasolar planets using Integral Field Spectroscopy (IFS),
if coupled with an extreme Adaptive Optics system and analyzed with a
Simultaneous Differential Imaging technique (SDI), are a powerful tool to
detect and characterize extrasolar planets directly; they enhance the signal of
the planet and, at the same time, reduces the impact of stellar light and
consequently important noise sources like speckles. In order to verify the
efficiency of such a technique, we developed a simulation code able to test the
capabilities of this IFS-SDI technique for different kinds of planets and
telescopes, modelling the atmospheric and instrumental noise sources. The first
results obtained by the simulations show that many significant extrasolar
planet detections are indeed possible using the present 8m-class telescopes
within a few hours of exposure time. The procedure adopted to simulate IFS
observations is presented here in detail, explaining in particular how we
obtain estimates of the speckle noise, Adaptive Optics corrections, specific
instrumental features, and how we test the efficiency of the SDI technique to
increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the planet detection. The most important
results achieved by simulations of various objects, from 1 M_J to brown dwarfs
of 30 M_J, for observations with an 8 meter telescope, are then presented and
discussed.Comment: 60 pages, 37 figures, accepted in PASP, 4 Tables adde
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