462 research outputs found

    The remnant of SN1987A revealed at (sub-)mm wavelengths

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    Context: Supernova 1987A (SN1987A) exploded in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Its proximity and rapid evolution makes it a unique case study of the early phases in the development of a supernova remnant. One particular aspect of interest is the possible formation of dust in SN1987A, as SNe could contribute significantly to the dust seen at high redshifts. Aims: We explore the properties of SN1987A and its circumburst medium as seen at mm and sub-mm wavelengths, bridging the gap between extant radio and infrared (IR) observations of respectively the synchrotron and dust emission. Methods: SN1987A was observed with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) at 3.2 mm in July 2005, and with the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) at 0.87 mm in May 2007. We present the images and brightness measurements of SN1987A at these wavelengths for the first time. Results: SN1987A is detected as an unresolved point source of 11.2 +/- 2.0 mJy at 3.2 mm (5" beam) and 21 +/- 4 mJy at 0.87 mm (18" beam). These flux densities are in perfect agreement with extrapolations of the powerlaw radio spectrum and modified-blackbody dust emission, respectively. This places limits on the presence of free-free emission, which is similar to the expected free-free emission from the ionized ejecta from SN1987A. Adjacent, fainter emission is observed at 0.87 mm extending ~0.5' towards the south-west. This could be the impact of the supernova progenitor's wind when it was still a red supergiant upon a dense medium. Conclusions: We have established a continuous spectral energy distribution for the emission from SN1987A and its immediate surroundings, linking the IR and radio data. This places limits on the contribution from ionized plasma. Our sub-mm image reveals complexity in the distribution of cold dust surrounding SN1987A, but leaves room for freshly synthesized dust in the SN ejecta.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters on 28 April 2011. A better quality figure 1 can be had from http://www.astro.keele.ac.uk/~jacco/research/SN1987A087mm.ep

    Search for a Radio Pulsar in the Remnant of Supernova 1987A

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    We have observed the remnant of supernova SN~1987A (SNR~1987A), located in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), to search for periodic and/or transient radio emission with the Parkes 64\,m-diameter radio telescope. We found no evidence of a radio pulsar in our periodicity search and derived 8σ\sigma upper bounds on the flux density of any such source of 31 μ31\,\muJy at 1.4~GHz and 21 μ21\,\muJy at 3~GHz. Four candidate transient events were detected with greater than 7σ7\sigma significance, with dispersion measures (DMs) in the range 150 to 840\,cm−3 ^{-3}\,pc. For two of them, we found a second pulse at slightly lower significance. However, we cannot at present conclude that any of these are associated with a pulsar in SNR~1987A. As a check on the system, we also observed PSR~B0540−-69, a young pulsar which also lies in the LMC. We found eight giant pulses at the DM of this pulsar. We discuss the implications of these results for models of the supernova remnant, neutron star formation and pulsar evolution.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Vibration stability of Orion laser facility

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Thomas Telford (ICE Publishing) via the DOI in this record.In 2005 the UK Ministry of Defence awarded a contract for construction of the Orion laser facility at the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE). Orion delivers a power density of 1021W/cm2 on a 5 µm target, making it a world class facility for the study of high energy density physics. The ability to target to such high precision depends on ‘stability’ of the building and internal structures with respect to thermal expansion and vibrations. This paper concerns experimental activities supporting prediction and evaluation of the minute vibrations against a ‘budget’ comprising effects of all vibration sources, internal and external, and the sequence of experimental campaigns and signal evaluation that fed into this process. This involved a sequence of dynamics-based measurements of: • foundation pile stiffness • vibration propagation from both controlled and uncontrolled sources at stages during the construction and finally • evaluation of vibration levels in the as-built facility due to internal machinery and the few external vibration sources passing through the sophisticated vibration barrier. The approach focused on time series of vibrations in the design phase, and on evaluation of statistical properties of displacement power spectral density functions

    Evolution of the Radio Remnant of Supernova 1987A: Morphological Changes from Day 7000

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    We present radio imaging observations of supernova remnant 1987A at 9 GHz, taken with the Australia Telescope Compact Array over 21 years from 1992 to 2013. By employing a Fourier modeling technique to fit the visibility data, we show that the remnant structure has evolved significantly since day 7000 (mid-2006): the emission latitude has gradually decreased, such that the overall geometry has become more similar to a ring structure. Around the same time, we find a decreasing trend in the east-west asymmetry of the surface emissivity. These results could reflect the increasing interaction of the forward shock with material around the circumstellar ring, and the relative weakening of the interaction with the lower-density material at higher latitudes. The morphological evolution caused an apparent break in the remnant expansion measured with a torus model, from a velocity of 4600+150-200 km/s between day 4000 and 7000 to 2400+100-200 km/s after day 7000. However, we emphasize that there is no conclusive evidence for a physical slowing of the shock at any given latitude in the expanding remnant, and that a change of radio morphology alone appears to dominate the evolution. This is supported by our ring-only fits which show a constant expansion of 3890+/-50 km/s without deceleration between days 4000 and 9000. We suggest that once the emission latitude no longer decreases, the expansion velocity obtained from the torus model should return to the same value as that measured with the ring model.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, Figure 1 has been scaled dow

    Detection and whole genome sequencing of CPMMV in common bean resistant to BGMV from Paraná State.

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    Cowpea mild mottle virus (CPMMV) is a Carlavirus from the family Betaflexiviridae which has a linear single stranded positive sense rna genome of approximately 8,200 nt and infects a wide range of cultivated plants from the Fabaceae family. It is transmitted by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci

    Expected gamma-ray emission of supernova remnant SN 1987A

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    A nonlinear kinetic theory of cosmic ray (CR) acceleration in supernova remnants is employed to re-examine the nonthermal properties of the remnant of SN 1987A for an extended evolutionary period of 5--100 yr. It is shown that an efficient production of nuclear CRs leads to a strong modification of the outer supernova remnant shock and to a large downstream magnetic field Bd≈20B_\mathrm{d}\approx 20 mG. The shock modification and the strong field are required to yield the steep radio emission spectrum observed, as well as to considerable synchrotron cooling of high energy electrons which diminishes their X-ray synchrotron flux. These features are also consistent with the existing X-ray observations. The expected \gr energy flux at TeV-energies at the current epoch is nearly ϵγFγ≈4×10−13\epsilon_{\gamma}F_{\gamma}\approx 4\times 10^{-13} erg cm2^2s−1^{-1} under reasonable assumptions about the overall magnetic field topology and the turbulent perturbations of this field. The general nonthermal strength of the source is expected to increase roughly by a factor of two over the next 15 to 20 yrs; thereafter it should decrease with time in a secular form.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, a number of changes have been made, even though these are not changing the main results of the pape
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