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Jesper Sollerman DARK, NBI, Copenhagen Gamma-Ray Bursts; The first three hours Santorini August 30 2005. Supernova and GRB observations. A personal biased optical observational tutorial on SNe and GRBs. Supernova studies goes way back. SN 1054. Walter Baade (1893-1960).
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Jesper Sollerman DARK, NBI, Copenhagen Gamma-Ray Bursts; The first three hours Santorini August 30 2005 Supernova and GRB observations A personal biased optical observational tutorial on SNe and GRBs..
Supernova studies goes way back SN 1054
Walter Baade (1893-1960) Fritz Zwicky (1898-1974) “With all reservation we advance the view that a supernova represents the transition of an ordinary star into a neutron star, consisting mainly of neutrons” (Baade & Zwicky 1934). Core-collapse SNe..
Classification The Supernova zoo ...
SupernovaSpectroscopy near maximum two weeks later Type Ia
Supernova Spectroscopy Type II
Supernova classification core collapse in massive stars SN II (H) SN Ib/c (no H/He) Hypernovae/GRBs SN Ia (no H) thermonuclear explosions Compare GRB Zoo? (GRB, XRF, XRGRB, short, long, dark, weak, hard, soft..) [obafgkm]
Supernova types Thermonuclear SNe from low-mass stars (<8M) highly evolved stars (white dwarfs) explosive C and O burning binary systems required complete disruption Core-collapse SNe high mass stars (>8M) large envelopes burning due to compression single stars (binaries for SNe Ib/c) neutron star/(BH)
Energy sources Gravity →Type II supernovae (and Ib/c) collapse of a solar mass or more to a neutron star release of 1053 erg mostly νe 1051 erg in kinetic energy (expansion of the ejecta) 1049 erg in radiation Nuclear (binding) energy → Type Ia • explosive C and O burning of about one solar mass • release of 1051 erg (again! most to kinetic energy)
~ 0.13 mag SNe Ia Supernova Cosmology Project
GRB cosmology Mörtsell & Sollerman 2005 Require z, tjet
Classification For Ia = short GRB, see Dar & Rujula, Phys. Rep. 405, 203 (2004)
SN 1987A Suntzeff (2003) Core-collapse supernovae < Days (linear scale)
Core-Collapse Diversity Patat et al. 1996 – Type II SNe Richardsson et al. 2002 Type Ibc SNe
Isotopes of Ni and other elements conversion of -rays and positrons into heat and optical photons Radioactivity Diehl and Timmes (1998) Lpeak ~ M(56Ni)
Gamma-Ray Bursts Vela
Supernova- connection from the start
Theories..... Nerimoff 1994
Theories..... Nerimoff 1994 Several may be correct!
Theories..... Nerimoff 1994 Most must be wrong!
CGRO/BATSE 1991-2000 Cosmological? Beppo-Sax 1996-2002 Cosmological!
The first hint .. GRB 980425 <--> SN 1998bw @ z=0.0085
SN 1998bw Galama et al. 1998 3 1 1-3 2 Fynbo et al. 2000 Sollerman et al. 2002
A peculiar supernova at the right place and time.. Unusally energetic! (The supernova!) Galama et al. 1998 Sollerman et al. 2000 Patat et al. 2001 Sollerman et al. 2002 Maximum Light Spectra But no afterglow.. Suggestive rather than conclusive.. Nando Patat - IAU Colloquium 192 – Supernovae(5 years of SN1998bw)
GRB 980326 Red Bumps Castro-Tirado & Gorosabel 1999 Bloom et al. 1999
GRB explosion sites. e.g., Bloom et al., Sokolov et al., Fruchter et al., and many others
II Zw 40 GRB 990123, HST days 16, 59 och 380.
GRB 011121: z = 0.36 Greiner et al. 2003 Garnavich et al. 2003
GRB 030329 z=0.168526
GRB 030329 optical afterglow Guziy et al. (200 ) Deng et al.
SN 2003dh Stanek et al. 2003 (Matheson et al. )
SN 2003dh Amazingly similar..
SN 2003dh expansion velocity SN 1998bw @ 8 days Si II6355 SN 2003dh @ 10 days SN 1998bw @ 12 days v = 0.12c @ 10 days
SN 2003dh lightcurve: faster rise & decay Larger expansion velocity than SN 1998bw (and any other SN) Indicates a short delay between SN and GRB (see recent Deng et al. 2005) SN 1998bw @ z = 0.1685 SN 1998bw – 7 days SN 1998bw stretched 0.7
Santorini GRB summerschool – The first three hours.... Sokolov et al. 2003, Bull.Spec.Ast.Obs., 56, 5
GRB 031203 = SN 2003lw Thomsen et al. 2004 (also Cobb et al, Gal-Yam et al.) Malesani et al. 2004 Another SN 1998bw look alike! And like GRB980425, also no afterglow..
And now to something completely different? XRF 030723 Fynbo, Sollerman, Hjorth, et al. 2004
July 26, FORS1, 3.8 hr, G300V 3800Å 8900Å
5300Å 8900Å Aug 7+8, FORS2, 3.8 hr, G600RI
GRB021004, NOT, z=2.33 GRB000926, NOT, z=2.04 XRF030723, VLT
Supernova? • In qualitative agreement with the evidence (lightcurve + SED) • Peaks early and has a narrow peak • Incompatible with SN1998bw lightcurve at any redshift • Envelope-stripped progenitor, asymmetric explosion seen near a pole, high ionisation? • SN1994I at z=0.6 is the known SN that gives the best match • Abs. Mag: • z=0.4 => similar to SN1994I • z=1.0 => brighter than SN1998bw Tominaga et al. (2004).
GRB 021211 Della Valle et al. 2003 XRF 020903 Soderberg et al. 2005 See also Zeh, Klose & Hartmann 2004