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Lee Clement PHYS 2070 Thursday, 7 April, 2011 Image Credit: NASA (Hubble)
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Plerionic type remnant of Supernova SN 1054 Filled shell structure powered by pulsar wind (Green) Located in Taurus RA: 05h 34m 31.95s Dec: +22° 58’ 54.4” (J2000) (Cutri et al.) First observed by John Bevis (1731) Independently rediscovered by Charles Messier (1758) Distance: 1930 pc (Trimble, 1973) Angular size: 6’ x 4’ (Dyer) Magnitude: 8.4 (Dyer) Image Credit: Stellarium
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20-21 January, 2011 Conditions ▪ Cold! (-27 C) ▪ Sunset: 17:03 ▪ Moonrise: 18:38 ▪ Waning gibbous with 99% of the visible disc illuminated ▪ Hoped to get data before moon got too high ▪ Cloud: Initially none ▪ Worsened over the course of the evening ▪ Sky glow: Initially some to the North (Winnipeg) ▪ SQM: 19.61 ▪ Worsened as moon rose and clouds rolled in SQM: 17.15 around 20:45 SQM: 15.63 around 21:30
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Series of unfortunate events Deadbolt on dome side door frozen shut ▪ Possibly inadequate temperature equalization inside dome Telescope would only focus in one direction ▪ Had to wait for Jennifer ▪ Wire had become disconnected in dome ▪ Rheostat adjustment needed in fuse panel Dome froze stuck ▪ M1 had drifted past the edge of the aperture ▪ Spent ~30 mins trying to assist dome motor to rotate dome End result Not able to start collecting data until 21:20 ▪ Bright moon ▪ Partial cloud cover
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30 x 60-sec exposures Large variations in brightness Variable clouds Bright moon
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To sample readout noise of the CCD chip Average of 10 x 0-sec exposures
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To correct for thermal noise in the CCD chip 5 x 60-sec exposures with the shutter closed Master bias subtracted then frames averaged Interesting feature: periodic noise Unknown source
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To correct for illumination variations, dust, etc. 30 x 60-sec exposures of sky regions near M1 Master bias and master dark subtracted Normalized to mean value of 1 Median taken Also exhibits periodic noise Unknown source
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Master bias and master dark subtracted from raw data Result divided by master flat Registered images in 3 parts Brightness variations Discarded 5 frames
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Average of registered calibrated images Problem: Persistent gradient from northeast to southwest E N
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Used ImageJ’s ‘Subtract Background’ function Radius: 300.0 px Create background Sliding paraboloid Produced a model of the gradient
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Subtracted gradient model from reduced data E N
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Nugent (1998) measured the expansion of the Crab Nebula Scans of 4 high-resolution photographs Measured the motion of several filaments of the Crab’s structure Measuring filaments not feasible with GAO data Too blurry Needed to look at larger scale features instead Compared GAO image to POSS I (1951) and POSS II (1991) red filter images
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Took the square root of the gradient-subtracted image to enhance contrast around the edges Vertically flipped to match orientation Resized POSS I and POSS II images to be a similar scale to GAO image Also stretched brightness so that only portions visible in GAO image were visible ▪ Some guesswork GAO (2011) POSS I (1951)POSS II (1991) E N E N E N
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Made use of the bottom two stars of the southwest trapezoid formation In Aladin, measured separation on POSS I and POSS II images ▪ Distance: 1.09’ E N 1.09’
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Initially intended to measure distance from central pulsar to various features Problem: Not obvious where the centre is GAO (2011) POSS I (1951)POSS II (1991) E N E N E N ??
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Alternative method Measured distance between two sets of easily distinguishable features Tried to approximate the major and minor axes GAO (2011)
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Dataset Julian Date Major “Axis” (arcmin) Minor “Axis” (arcmin) POSS I2433957.9166674.8703.839 POSS II2448546.9583335.0343.914 GAO2455583.6458335.4094.353 All measurements made using line segments in ImageJ
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Plotted measured “axis” distances against Julian dates of observations Calculated slopes of lines of best fit to approximate rate of expansion ▪ Similar for both “axes” ▪ Uniformly expanding
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Rate of expansion was found to be 0.5 arcsec/yr Inconsistent with published value of 0.15 arcsec/yr (Bietenholz) Extrapolated to point of zero size to determine original date of supernova Found CE 1405 ± 29 ▪ Inconsistent with result of Nugent (1998): CE 1130 ± 16 ▪ Inconsistent with result of Trimble (1968): CE 1140 ± 15 ▪ Closer to result of Bietenholz (1991): CE 1245 ± 92 ▪ Measured only the synchrotron component However, known date of supernova is CE 1054 ▪ Confirms result that expansion of the Crab Nebula is accelerating ▪ Exact expansion function unknown (Nugent)
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Very limited data set Low detail of GAO data precluded measuring more than a few features Random errors would average out with more measurements Guesswork involved in determining what parts of POSS I and POSS II images were visible in GAO image Guesswork involved in matching edges of features between images
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Despite unfortunate observing conditions, managed to acquire data that shows some large-scale structure of the Crab Nebula Data not so good for astrometry! Calculated expansion rate inconsistent with previous results Calculated date of supernova inconsistent with previous results ▪ Still later than actual date ▪ Confirms acceleration of expansion E N
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Bietenholz, M. F., Kronberg, P. P., Hogg, D. E. and Wilson, A. S. The Expansion of the Crab Nebula 1991 Cutri, et al. 2MASS All-Sky Catalog of Point Sources 2003 Dyer, Alan. The Messier Catalogue 2010 Green, Dave. G184.6-5.8 2009 Trimble, Virginia. The Distance to the Crab Nebula and NP 0532 1973 Trimble, Virginia. Motions and Structure of the Filamentary Envelope of the Crab Nebula 1968 Images: http://hubblesite.org/gallery/album/pr2005037a/ http://archive.stsci.edu/dss/
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