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Supernova 1987A at 25 years

Supernova 1987A at 25 years. TOPICS. Highlights of the past 25 years Outstanding mysteries and surprises What we can expect to learn, sooner and later. Supernova Energy Sources.

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Supernova 1987A at 25 years

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  1. Supernova 1987A at 25 years

  2. TOPICS • Highlights of the past 25 years • Outstanding mysteries and surprises • What we can expect to learn, sooner and later

  3. Supernova Energy Sources • Core collapse: E ~ GM2/R ~ 0.1 Mc2 ~ 1053 ergsNeutrinos: t ~ 10s • Radioactivity: 0.07 M8[56Ni g56Co g56Fe] ~ 1049 ergs.Light: t ~ 3 months • Kinetic energy: ~ 10 M8, Vexpansion ~ 3000 km/s ~ 1051 ergs ~ 1% core collapse. X-rays: t ~ decades - centuries.

  4. Neutrino signal (1053 ergs) a a neutron star formed (I think!)

  5. 56Co 57Co 44Ti Optical Light (1049 ergs): driven by radioactivity

  6. X-rays (1051 ergs): from kinetic energy (crash)

  7. What we have learned: the interior

  8. RADIOACTIVE DEBRIS

  9. IR nebular spectrum: • CO bands a interior T < 3000 K @ 260 days; now < 300 K • Strong, optically thick FIR lines of [FeII], [CoII] a newly synthesized Fe must occupy ~ 50% of volume of glowing interior: “nickel bubbles” due to foaming action driven by radioactive heating Fe, Co, Ni Dust C, O, Si, S H, He

  10. Interior Dust Formation • 400 – 700 d: bolometric luminosity shifted from optical to FIR; • Red sides of nebular emission lines vanished • Visible glow of interior comes mostly from near side. • Morphology determined largely by dust distribution. • Dust obscures central object. • Southern extension is in equatorial plane

  11. What we have learned: the exterior

  12. Crash: birth of SNR1987A Time-lapse movie of HST images 1994 - 2006

  13. HST - Optical March 2011 ATCA 9 GHz 2009 Chandra 0.5 – 2 keV 2009

  14. Light Curves of CS Ring Optical (HST) Radio, IR, X-ray

  15. RADIOACTIVE DEBRIS

  16. Motion of optical (HST) hotspots

  17. Expansion of X-ray ring (Racusin et al) and radio shell (Ng et al)

  18. Heating of debris by external X-rays

  19. Hubble observations of the reverse shock: an adventure in spectroscopy

  20. Ha

  21. Line emission and impact ionization at reverse shock surface H +pg2p +e H*gH +hn Ha, Lya Dn/n=v;/c H +pgH*+p

  22. Luminosities of Ha and Lya Each hydrogen atom crossing RS will produce, on average: Rexc(2p)/Rion = 1 Lya Rexc(Ha)/Rion = 0.2 Ha Integrated luminosity of Haamass flux of H atoms across RS.

  23. z To observer Surfaces of constant Doppler shift are planar sections of the supernova debris Dl/lo = v/c where v = H0z and H0 = 1/t Dl

  24. STIS Ha Observations Jan 30, 2010

  25. Doppler Mapping of Ha Emission from RS Surface

  26. Lyman-a

  27. Ha 2010/2004

  28. Lya vs. Ha • Reverse shock: photon emission ratio Lya/Ha should be 5/1 • Ratio should be independent of Doppler velocity • But actual ratio varies from 10/1 to 200/1 ! • Line profiles completely different: unlike Ha, Lya is not confined to surface; appears to come from interior • (We should have realized this in 2004): There must be another mechanism to account for most Lyaemission! • Two possiblities (maybe both): • 1. Resonant scattering of narrow Lya from the ring by HI in debris • 2. Heating of HI in debris by external X-rays

  29. Resonance Scattering of Lya by Supernova Debris Source of Lya is nearly stationary emission from hotspots in circumstellar ring Model requires: aSufficient luminosity of Lya photons from hotspots to account for broad Lya; aSufficient optical depth of SN envelope in damping wings of Lya @ 5000 km/s.

  30. New (March 2011) results from • Cosmic Origins Spectrograph • COS compared to STIS: • UV only • Much (60x) better sensitivity & S/N • But poor spatial resolution

  31. Ly a CIV1550 He II 1640 NV 1240 H (2S a 1S) continuum from hotspots

  32. Broad NV1239,1242 Emission from Reverse Shock NV Borkowski, Blondin, & McCray 1997 Reverse shock excitation: Ha/H = [Rexc(Ha) (12.1 eV)]/Rion(H) (13.6 eV) = 0.2 NV1240/N = [Rexc(1240) (10.1 eV)]/Rion(N+4) (98 eV) = 500!

  33. Carbon/Nitrogen Ratio • Standard cosmic abundance ratio: C/N = 4.1 • Narrow UV emission lines from ring a C/N = 0.11 • Broad UV emission lines from RSa C/N = 0.05 • Interpretation: • nuclear burning (CNO bi-cycle) converts C, O into N. This explains decreased C/N ratio in ring. • Further decrease of C/N ratio seen in RS a either: (a) stratification of C/N ratio in outer envelope of progenitor; or (b) continued nucleosynthesis subsequent to ejection of ring.

  34. The Future: what can we hope to learn? • What is the compact object? • What made the triple ring system? • How (where) are the relativistic electrons accelerated? • What is the distribution of newly-synthesized elements in the SN interior

  35. Compact object? – not a clue! Bolometric luminosity < few hundred L8 < 10-3 Crab pulsar The best hope: image compact FIR source with JWST (2018?)

  36. Mysteries How (where) are the relativistic electrons accelerated? Image non-thermal radio emission. ALMAwilldo these things: Angular resolution <0.1 arcsec Cycle 0 observations: April 2012

  37. New Far Infrared Results from Herschel Telescope 250mm emission has been interpreted as continuum emission from interior dust grains (Matsuura et al 2011). This requires ~ 0.6 solar masses of dust at 18K !!??. Even if CO (2.6 mm) line emission is 1% of dust emission, ALMA will see it. If so, ALMA will provide a 3-d map of the interior CO emitting region.

  38. Simulated ALMA Cycle 0 images @ 0.8 mm L: 10 mJY central, 10 mJy ring; R: 3 mJy central, 17 mJy ring

  39. HST Cycle 20 (we hope!) STIS: 3-d map of interior debris + RS WFC3 + filters: 2-d images of high-velocity Lya and Ha

  40. Thanks to: • Bob Kirshner and SAINTS team • Kevin France • ClaesFransson • Remy Indebetouw • Sangwook Park • and many others

  41. Inner debris Reverse Shock VLT broad Ha profile: Fransson et al 2011

  42. HeII 1640: analogue of Ha: 1640/Ha = [XHe/XH][Rexc/Rion(He)]/[Rexc/Rion(H)] = [XHe/XH] = 0.21 ✔ But line profiles are different, because He+ can be accelerated in shocked gas.

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