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Milky Way Galaxy
Credit: H F Stevance

Dr Heloise Stevance

Schmidt AI in Science Fellow

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics
heloise.stevance@physics.ox.ac.uk
hfstevance.com
  • About
  • Research
  • Selected invited lectures
  • Prizes, awards and recognition
  • Publications

Erratum: Spectropolarimetry of the Type IIb SN 2008aq

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 493:3 (2020) 3996-3996

Authors:

HF Stevance, JR Maund, D Baade, P Höflich, F Patat, J Spyromilio, JC Wheeler, A Clocchiatti, L Wang, Y Yang
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A systematic aging method I: HII regions D118 and D119 in NGC 300

(2020)

Authors:

HF Stevance, JJ Eldridge, A McLeod, ER Stanway, AA Chrimes
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The shape of SN 1993J re-analyzed

(2020)

Authors:

HF Stevance, D Baade, JR Bruten, A Cikota, A Clocchiatti, DC Hines, P Höflich, JR Maund, F Patat, PJ Vallely, JC Wheeler
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Hoki: Making BPASS accessible through Python

(2020)

Authors:

Heloise F Stevance, JJ Eldridge, Elizabeth Stanway
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Hoki: Making BPASS accessible through Python

The Journal of Open Source Software Open Journals 5:45 (2020)

Authors:

Heloise Stevance, J Eldridge, Elizabeth Stanway

Abstract:

The mergers of binary compact objects such as neutron stars and black holes are of central interest to several areas of astrophysics, including as the progenitors of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), sources of high-frequency gravitational waves and likely production sites for heavy element nucleosynthesis via rapid neutron capture (the r-process). These heavy elements include some of great geophysical, biological and cultural importance, such as thorium, iodine and gold. Here we present observations of the exceptionally bright gamma-ray burst GRB 230307A. We show that GRB 230307A belongs to the class of long-duration gamma-ray bursts associated with compact object mergers, and contains a kilonova similar to AT2017gfo, associated with the gravitational-wave merger GW170817. We obtained James Webb Space Telescope mid-infrared (mid-IR) imaging and spectroscopy 29 and 61 days after the burst. The spectroscopy shows an emission line at 2.15 microns which we interpret as tellurium (atomic mass A=130), and a very red source, emitting most of its light in the mid-IR due to the production of lanthanides. These observations demonstrate that nucleosynthesis in GRBs can create r-process elements across a broad atomic mass range and play a central role in heavy element nucleosynthesis across the Universe.Comment: Submitted. Comments welcome! Nature (2023
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