Constraining the physical properties of Type II-Plateau supernovae using nebular phase spectra

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 420:4 (2012) 3451-3468

Authors:

K Maguire, A Jerkstrand, SJ Smartt, C Fransson, A Pastorello, S Benetti, S Valenti, F Bufano, G Leloudas

Abstract:

We present a study of the nebular phase spectra of a sample of Type II-Plateau supernovae with identified progenitors or restrictive limits. The evolution of line fluxes, shapes and velocities is compared within the sample, and interpreted by the use of a spectral synthesis code. The small diversity within the data set can be explained by strong mixing occurring during the explosion, and by recognizing that most lines have significant contributions from primordial metals in the H envelope, which dominates the total ejecta mass in these types of objects. In particular, when using the [Oi] 6300, 6364Å doublet for estimating the core mass of the star, care has to be taken to account for emission from primordial O in the envelope. Finally, a correlation between the Hα line width and the mass of 56Ni is presented, suggesting that higher energy explosions are associated with higher 56Ni production. © 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2012 RAS.

Disc-jet coupling in the 2009 outburst of the black hole candidate H1743-322

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 421:1 (2012) 468-485

Authors:

JCA Miller-Jones, GR Sivakoff, D Altamirano, M Coriat, S Corbel, V Dhawan, HA Krimm, RA Remillard, MP Rupen, DM Russell, RP Fender, S Heinz, EG Körding, D Maitra, S Markoff, S Migliari, CL Sarazin, V Tudose

Abstract:

We present an intensive radio and X-ray monitoring campaign on the 2009 outburst of the Galactic black hole candidate X-ray binary H1743-322. With the high angular resolution of the Very Long Baseline Array, we resolve the jet ejection event and measure the proper motions of the jet ejecta relative to the position of the compact core jets detected at the beginning of the outburst. This allows us to accurately couple the moment when the jet ejection event occurred with X-ray spectral and timing signatures. We find that X-ray timing signatures are the best diagnostic of the jet ejection event in this outburst, which occurred as the X-ray variability began to decrease and the Type C quasi-periodic oscillations disappeared from the X-ray power density spectrum. However, this sequence of events does not appear to be replicated in all black hole X-ray binary outbursts, even within an individual source. In our observations of H1743-322, the ejection was contemporaneous with a quenching of the radio emission, prior to the start of the major radio flare. This contradicts previous assumptions that the onset of the radio flare marks the moment of ejection. The jet speed appears to vary between outbursts, with a possible positive correlation with outburst luminosity. The compact core radio jet reactivated on transition to the hard intermediate state at the end of the outburst, and not when the source reached the low hard spectral state. Comparison with the known near-infrared behaviour of the compact jets suggests a gradual evolution of the compact jet power over a few days near the beginning and end of an outburst. © 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2012 RAS.

Multi-wavelength Extragalactic Surveys and the Role of MeerKAT and SALT

African Skies 16 (2012) 44-44

The Hi Environment of Counter-rotating Gas Hosts: Gas Accretion from Cold Gas Blobs

(2012)

Authors:

Aeree Chung, Martin Bureau, JH van Gorkom, Baerbel Koribalski

A systematic variation of the stellar initial mass function in early-type galaxies

(2012)

Authors:

Michele Cappellari, Richard M McDermid, Katherine Alatalo, Leo Blitz, Maxime Bois, Frederic Bournaud, M Bureau, Alison F Crocker, Roger L Davies, Timothy A Davis, PT de Zeeuw, Pierre-Alain Duc, Eric Emsellem, Sadegh Khochfar, Davor Krajnovic, Harald Kuntschner, Pierre-Yves Lablanche, Raffaella Morganti, Thorsten Naab, Tom Oosterloo, Marc Sarzi, Nicholas Scott, Paolo Serra, Anne-Marie Weijmans, Lisa M Young