1,711 research outputs found

    Rebirth of Novae as Distance Indicators Due to Efficient Large Telescopes

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    Nova outbursts are the result of strong thermonuclear runaways on the surface of a white dwarf accreting Hydrogen-rich material from a small mass companion. These giant explosions cause the star to increase its brightness by hundreds of thousands of times then making these objects powerful standard candles useful to measure the extragalactic distances.We have used the Very Large Telescope, located in the Chilean Atacama desert, to search for novae in NGC 1316--an early type galaxy in the Fornax cluster. We discovered 4 novae with 3h of observing time. The use of 8-10m class telescopes coupled with new detectors, can dramatically improve the efficiency of nova searches in extragalactic systems.Comment: 4 pages + 2 plot

    Nova Populations

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    In this article we review the current status of the stellar population assignment for novae. Observations in the Milky Way and in external galaxies point out the existence of two nova populations: fast and bright novae, mainly originated from massive white dwarfs and associated with the `thin disk/spiral arm' stellar population, and slow and faint novae, originated from lighter white dwarfs and associated with `thick-disk/bulge' population.Comment: Invited Review (14 pag.). To appear in the Proceedings of the Conference ``Classical Nova Explosions'', M. Hernanz and J. Jose eds., American Inst. of Physics, 200

    Measurement of the spin of the M87 black hole from its observed twisted light

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    We present the first observational evidence that light propagating near a rotating black hole is twisted in phase and carries orbital angular momentum (OAM). This physical observable allows a direct measurement of the rotation of the black hole. We extracted the OAM spectra from the radio intensity data collected by the Event Horizon Telescope from around the black hole M87* by using wavefront reconstruction and phase recovery techniques and from the visibility amplitude and phase maps. This method is robust and complementary to black-hole shadow circularity analyses. It shows that the M87* rotates clockwise with an estimated rotation parameter a=0.90±0.05a=0.90\pm0.05 with 95%\sim 95\% confidence level (c.l.) and inclination i=17±2i=17^\circ \pm2^\circ, equivalent to a magnetic arrested disk with inclination i=163±2i=163^\circ\pm2^\circ. From our analysis we conclude, within a 6 σ\sigma c.l., that the M87* is rotating.Comment: Small addition on coherence. 5 pages, 2 figures Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter

    Predicted rates of merging neutron stars in galaxies

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    In this work, we compute rates of merging neutron stars (MNS) in galaxies of different morphological type, as well as the cosmic MNS rate in a unitary volume of the Universe adopting different cosmological scenarios. Our aim is to provide predictions of kilonova rates for future observations both at low and high redshift. In the adopted galaxy models, we take into account the production of r-process elements either by MNS or core-collapse supernovae. In computing the MNS rates we adopt either a constant total time delay for merging (10 Myr) or a distribution function of such delays. Our main conclusions are: i) the observed present time MNS rate in our Galaxy is well reproduced either with a constant time delay or a distribution function t1\propto t^{-1}. The [Eu/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] relation in the Milky Way can be well reproduced with only MNS, if the time delay is short and constant. If the distribution function of delays is adopted, core-collapse supernovae as are also required. ii) The present time cosmic MNS rate can be well reproduced in any cosmological scenario, either pure luminosity evolution or a typical hierarchical one, and spirals are the main contributors to it. iii) The spirals are the major contributors to the cosmic MNS at all redshifts in hierarchical scenarios. In the pure luminosity evolution scenario, the spirals are the major contributors locally, whereas at high redshift ellipticals dominate. iv) The predicted cosmic MNS rate well agrees with the cosmic rate of short Gamma Ray Bursts if the distribution function of delays is adopted, in a cosmological hierarchical scenario observationally derived. v) Future observations of Kilonovae in ellipticals will allow to disentangle among constant or a distribution of time delays as well as among different cosmological scenarios

    Globular Cluster Calibration of the Peak Brightness of the Type Ia Supernova 1992A and the Value of Ho

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    We have determined the absolute magnitude at maximum light of SN 1992A by using the turn-over magnitude of the Globular Cluster Luminosity Function of its parent galaxy, NGC 1380. A recalibration of the peak of the turn-over magnitude of the Milky Way clusters using the latest HIPPARCOS results has been made with an assessment of the complete random and systematic error budget. The following results emerge: a distance to NGC 1380 of 18.6 +/- 1.4 Mpc, corresponding to (m-M)=31.35 +/- 0.16, and an absolute magnitude of SN 1992A at maximum of M_B(max)= -18.79 +/- 0.16. Taken at face value, SN 1992A seems to be more than half a magnitude fainter than the other SNeI-a for which accurate distances exist. We discuss the implications of this result and present possible explanations. We also discuss the Phillips'(1993) relationship between rate of decline and the absolute magnitude at maximum, on the basis of 9 SNeI-a, whose individual distances have been obtained with Cepheids and the Globular Cluster Luminosity Function. The new calibration of this relationship, applied to the most distant SNe of the Calan-Tololo survey, yields Ho=62 +/- 6 km/s/Mpc.Comment: 12 pages (MNRAS style, two columns, including 6 figures), accepted for publication in the MNRAS, a full resolution version of Fig.1 is available at http://www.ucolick.org/~mkissle

    New measurements of Ωm\Omega_m from gamma-ray bursts

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    Context: Data from cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), and supernovae Ia (SNe-Ia) support a constant dark energy equation of state with w01w_0 \sim -1. Measuring the evolution of ww along the redshift is one of the most demanding challenges for observational cosmology. Aims: We discuss the existence of a close relation for GRBs, named Combo-relation, based on characteristic parameters of GRB phenomenology such as the prompt intrinsic peak energy Ep,iE_{p,i}, the X-ray afterglow, the initial luminosity of the shallow phase L0L_0, the rest-frame duration τ\tau of the shallow phase, and the index of the late power-law decay αX\alpha_X. We use it to measure Ωm\Omega_m and the evolution of the dark energy equation of state. We also propose a new calibration method for the same relation, which reduces the dependence on SNe Ia systematics. Methods: We have selected a sample of GRBs with 1) a measured redshift zz; 2) a determined intrinsic prompt peak energy Ep,iE_{p,i}, and 3) a good coverage (0.3-10) keV afterglow light curves. The fitting technique of the rest.frame (0.3-10) keV luminosity light curves represents the core of the Combo-relation. We separate the early steep decay, considered a part of the prompt emission, from the X-ray afterglow additional component. Data with the largest positive residual, identified as flares, are automatically eliminated until the p-value of the fit becomes greater than 0.3. Results: We strongly minimize the dependency of the Combo-GRB calibration on SNe Ia. We also measure a small extra-Poissonian scatter of the Combo-relation, which allows us to infer from GRBs alone ΩM=0.290.15+0.23\Omega_M =0.29^{+0.23}_{-0.15} (1σ\sigma) for the Λ\LambdaCDM cosmological model, and ΩM=0.400.16+0.22\Omega_M =0.40^{+0.22}_{-0.16}, w0=1.430.66+0.78w_0 = -1.43^{+0.78}_{-0.66} for the flat-Universe variable equation of state case.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A. Truncated abstract tex
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