Lessons from Spectral Evolution and High-Velocity Features in Core-Normal Type Ia J. Craig Wheeler On Behalf of the Austin Mafia: Howie Marion (+CfA),

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cosmological measurements with Supernovae Ia
Advertisements

SN 1987A spectacular physics Bruno Leibundgut ESO.
Ia 型超新星爆発時に おけるダスト形成 野沢 貴也 東京大学数物連携宇宙研究機構(IPMU) 共同研究者 前田啓一 (IPMU), 野本憲一 (IPMU/ 東大 ), 小笹隆司 ( 北大 )
How to Make a SNIa J. Craig Wheeler Department of Astronomy. University of Texas at Austin Supernova Cosmology and Looking to the Future Cook's Branch.
Nova & SuperNova Heart of the Valley Astronomers, Corvallis, OR 2007.
Type Ia Supernovae Progenitors. Type Ia Supernovae Historical defining characteristics: Generally, lack of lines of hydrogen Contain a strong Si II absorption.
Circumstellar interaction in supernovae Poonam Chandra Royal Military Collage of Canada.
SN 2012fr in NGC 1365 Mark M. Phillips, Carlos Contreras, Eric Hsiao, Nidia Morrell, Kevin Krisciunas, Peter Brown, and Max Stritzinger.
Multidimensional Simulations of Type Ia Supernova Explosions: Confronting Model Predictions with Observations Wolfgang Hillebrandt MPI für Astrophysik.
Thermonuclear Supernovae Lifan Wang Texas A&M University Oct 6, 2013.
From Progenitor to Afterlife Roger Chevalier SN 1987AHST/SINS.
Timmes (1996). Ignition Conditions Flame Propagation Detonation, Deflagration, Delayed Detonation, Pulsational Detonation Light curves and cosmology Topics.
Supernovae from Massive Stars: light curves and spectral evolution Bruno Leibundgut ESO.
Bing Jiang, Astronomy Department, NJU 1 Progenitors of SN Ia : Circumstellar Interaction, Rotation, and Steady Interaction, Rotation, and Steady.
NASA's Chandra Sees Brightest Supernova Ever N. Smith et al. 2007, astro-ph/ v2.
1 1 Physics of Type Ia Supernova Explosions A. Khokhlov, A.Poludnenko (The University of Chicago) Lifan Wang (A&M) P. Hoeflich (U Florida)
Jens C. What Are Type Ia Supernovae? Jens C. Niemeyer Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik Based on collaborations with:
(Informal) workshop - Ferrara April 2004 SNe. Astrophysical (natural) Explosive Devices Thermonuclear SNe Gravitational collapse C-deflagration He-detonation.
Observed properties of SN From Woosley Lecture 16 See also Filippenko (1997; ARAA 35, 309) See also
SN Ia: Blown to Smithereens (Röpke and Hillebrandt 2005) Nick Cowan UW Astronomy March 2005 Nick Cowan UW Astronomy March 2005.
Type Ia Supernovae: standard candles? Roger Chevalier.
Modeling Type Ia Supernovae from ignition, to explosion, to emission
Death of Stars I Physics 113 Goderya Chapter(s): 13 Learning Outcomes:
TURBULENCE AND HEATING OF MOLECULAR CLOUDS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER: Natalie Butterfield (UIowa) Cornelia Lang (UIowa) Betsy Mills (NRAO) Dominic Ludovici.
The Death of a Low Mass Star n Evolution of a sun-like star post helium- flash –The star moves onto the horizontal branch of the Hertzprung-Russell diagram.
The Photometric and Spectral Evolution of the 2008 NGC 300 Transient Roberta M. Humphreys University of Minnesota Prieto 2008 from Spitzer 2003, 2007 Discovery.
The Evolution of Quasars and Massive Black Holes “Quasar Hosts and the Black Hole-Spheroid Connection”: Dunlop 2004 “The Evolution of Quasars”: Osmer 2004.
SN Ia diversity as an indicator of multiple progenitors? Andy Howell University of California, Santa Barbara Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Image:
Imaging Compact Supermassive Binary Black Holes with VLBI G. B. Taylor (UNM), C. Rodriguez (UNM), R. T. Zavala (USNO) A. B. Peck (CfA), L. K. Pollack (UCSC),
Lecture 2: Formation of the chemical elements Bengt Gustafsson: Current problems in Astrophysics Ångström Laboratory, Spring 2010.
Dust Formation in Various Types of Supernovae Takaya Nozawa (IPMU, University of Tokyo) T. Kozasa (Hokkaido Univ.) K. Nomoto (IPMU) K. Maeda (IPMU) H.
SNLS-03D3bb Andy Howell University of Toronto and the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS)
Precise Cosmology from SNe Ia Wang Xiao-feng Physics Department and Tsinghua Center for Astrophysics, Tsinghua University 2005, 9, 22, Sino-French Dark.
Zorro and the nature of SNe Ia Paolo A. Mazzali Max-Planck Institut für Astrophysik, Garching Astronomy Department and RESearch Centre for the Early Universe,
The theoretical understanding of Type Ia Supernovae Daniel Kasen.
Different Kinds of “Novae” I. Super Novae Type Ia: No hydrogen, CO WD deflagration --> detonation Type Ia: No hydrogen, CO WD deflagration --> detonation.
Optical Spectroscopy of Novae in M31 Francesco Di Mille Padova University Asiago Observatory.
SN Ia rates and progenitors Mark Sullivan University of Southampton.
Spectroscopic signatures of SN Ia progenitors A talk not about the Palomar Transient Factory Avishay Gal-Yam, Weizmann Institute of Science Leiden workshop.
Introduction Star itself Ejecta, Great Eruption in 1840 formed the Homunculus The 5.52 yr periodicity Binary vs shell D = 2.3 kpc.
Spectral Signature of Emergent Magnetic Flux D1 神尾 精 Solar Seminar Balasubramaniam,K.S., 2001, ApJ, 557, 366. Chae, J. et al., 2000, ApJ, 528,
The ASC/Alliances Center for Astrophysical Thermonuclear Flashes The University of Chicago 1 05/31 ASC Alliances Center for Thermonuclear Flashes, University.
Progenitor stars of supernovae Poonam Chandra Royal Military College of Canada.
Physics 778 – Star formation: Protostellar disks Ralph Pudritz.
Y. Matsuo A), M. Hashimoto A), M. Ono A), S. Nagataki B), K. Kotake C), S. Yamada D), K. Yamashita E) Long Time Evolutionary Simulations in Supernova until.
NIRI Observations of Type Ia Supernovae Christopher L. Gerardy University of Texas, Austin Peter GarnavichNotre Dame Peter Hoeflich, UT Austin J. Craig.
Evolution of Newly Formed Dust in Population III Supernova Remnants and Its Impact on the Elemental Composition of Population II.5 Stars Takaya Nozawa.
Study of the type IIP supernova 2008gz Roy et al. 2011, MNRAS accepted.
A New Window on Radio and X-ray emission from Strongly Interacting Supernovae Poonam Chandra Royal Military College of Canada Collaborators: Roger Chevalier,
KASI Galaxy Evolution Journal Club A Massive Protocluster of Galaxies at a Redshift of z ~ P. L. Capak et al. 2011, Nature, in press (arXive: )
13 October 2006ESO Science Day1 / 7 E-ELT Spectropolarimetry of Type Ia Supernovae in the Coma Supercluster Dietrich Baade – ESO, Garching Lifan Wang –
On The Fate of a WD Highly Accreting Solar Composition Material Irit Idan 1, Nir J. Shaviv 2 and Giora Shaviv 1 1 Dept. Of Physics Technion Haifa Israel.
Nuclei in the Cosmos XI Heidelberg, July 22, 2010 Friedrich Röpke DFG Emmy Noether Junior Research Group Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik, Garching,
Mariko KATO (Keio Univ., Japan) collaboration with
Keck Observations of Two Supernovae Hours After Explosion Shock-Breakout Flash Spectroscopy as a New Window into the Evolution and Death of Massive Stars.
Supernova Interaction with Dense Mass Loss
Supernova Panel Discussion
The Best SN of 2005? Dietrich Baade (ESO) Peter Hoeflich (FSU)
Supernovae and Gamma-Ray Bursts
Outline Introducing thermonuclear supernovae
X-ray and Radio (and Optical) Observations of Cassiopeia A
A Semi-Analytic Model of Type Ia Supernovae
Exploring the global properties of SNe Ia
Formation of Dust in the Ejecta of Type Ia Supernovae
Supernovae as sources of interstellar dust
The supernova zoo HUJI winter school #35
Discovery of peculiar X-ray characteristics of AT2018cow with Swift
Formation of Dust in the Ejecta of Type Ia Supernovae
爆燃Ia型超新星爆発時に おけるダスト形成
Formation and evolution of dust in hydrogen-poor supernovae
Presentation transcript:

Lessons from Spectral Evolution and High-Velocity Features in Core-Normal Type Ia J. Craig Wheeler On Behalf of the Austin Mafia: Howie Marion (+CfA), Jozsef Vinko (+ U. of Szeged), Jeff Silverman (+ UCB), Robert Quimby (+IPMU) Texas A&M, April 9, 2103

Outline I.Spectral Evolution – Deflagration to Detonation Models II. => Single Degenerate? III.High-Velocity Features (as opposed to High Velocity SN Ia) IV.Collision with a CSM? I.Conclusions

Typical Def/Det Composition Structure (Höflich et al. 2004)

My conviction: 1D deflagration to detonation models do a pretty good job of accounting for the multi-band light curves and spectral evolution of Core Normal SN Ia Wheeler et al. (1998) Blondin et al. (2013) Optical, UV, NIR spectra Pre-maximum to nebular

With some perturbation, off-center def/det transition, can account for polarization (Höflich et al. 2006)

Deflagration/Detonation models do a pretty good job of accounting for the spectral evolution. Still uncertain physics of deflagration to detonation transition, but see recent work of Poludnenko et al. Paradigm shift through highly-resolved direct numerical simulations of turbulent combustion in hydrogen flames: no distributed flame. 1D Def/Det models are not the last word, but they set the bar: any competing model must do at least as good; not just light curves, but spectral evolution.

Röpke et al. (2012) “Hard collision” of two white dwarfs, detonation. Issues with initiating, propagating detonation with level set method Likely problems with polarization, nebular line profiles

Seitenzahl et al. (2103) – parametrized 3D Det/Def models, a challenge for the future.

Does the relative success of Def/Det models imply single degenerate progenitors? Def/Det models seem to demand a relatively slow evolution to central carbon ignition in a carbon/oxygen white dwarf very near the Chandrasekhar mass, runaway to form deflagration, transition to detonation. Consistent with classic models of single-degenerate evolution. But Relatively slow double-degenerate disruption (10s of orbits??) might do the job (Dan et al. 2011, 2012; but see Kasen talk).

High-Velocity Features Seen prominently in Ca NIR triplet prior to maximum, but also in Ca H&K. Si II, other lines. Clue to burning or to CSM?

Gerardy et al. (2004)

Quimby et al. (2006) “Linear” blue wing in Si II

High velocity Ca II NIR triplet + OI? (Marion, Vinko, JCW) Must observe well before maximum, early detection critical.

SN 2009ig beginning at -14 d (Marion et al. 2013)

Evolution of Si II (Marion et al. 2013)

High velocity and photospheric components of Si II, Si III, S II, Fe II (Marion et al. 2013).

Marion HET snapshot data

Evolution of High-Velocity Features and Photospheric Features (Marion et al. 2013) km/s

Silverman – BSNIP data Ca NIR HVF exist in all subtypes (core normal. 91bg, 91T), both high velocity and normal velocity in X. Wang classification scheme.

The high-velocity Si II blue wing extends up to the blue absorption of the Ca II NIR that extends to >30,000 km/s in blue wing (Quimby, et al. 2006) High velocity Si II must come from the white dwarf High velocity Ca from the CSM??

Chevalier – forward, reverse shocks, RT unstable contact discontinuity H, He, primordial Ca Contact Discontinuity Si, IME H, He, primordial Ca Si, IME

Gerardy et al. (2004)

Spectropolarimetry of Core Normal Type Ia SN2001el (Wang et al. 2001) Ca II NIR High- Velocity feature is significantly polarized

HVF Conclusions High-velocity features are common before maximum, but not universal (~90% ??; Silverman examining BSNIP data). High-velocity features are distinctly separate from the photosphere by ~ 6000 km/s, kinematically detached. High-velocity features are polarized. Highest velocity HV Si ~ lowest velocity HV Ca. Impact of SN ejecta on CSM shell, m ~ few hundredths of M sun, with primordial Ca gives a reasonable representation of the HVfeatures. If CSM shell, must lie at << cm to avoid contamination of early light curve, must have large covering factor to be so common, but sufficiently asymmetric to account for polarization.

Conclusions Deflagration to Detonation models work well for spectral evolution of Core Normal SN Ia (and some sub-varieties). Consistent with, but does not demand single degenerate evolution High-velocity features are strongly suggestive of a circumstellar structure of small mass (~ few 0.01 M sun ) and radius (typical size of orbit, ~ cm, would probably be adequate). Ca could be primordial, but do not know major constituent of CSM, H? He? C? O? SD?? DD??

Credit: David A. Hardy Type Ia