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Circumstellar interaction in supernovae Poonam Chandra Royal Military Collage of Canada SUPERNOVAE (SNe) Massive explosions in the universe Few months to few years timescale Energy emitted 1051 ergs (1029 times more than an atmospheric nuclear explosion) Shines brighter than the host Galaxy As much energy in 1 month as sun in ~1 billion years In universe 8 supernova explosions every second Thermonuclear and gravitational collapse Calcium in our bones Oxygen we breathe Iron in our cars Origin: Massive stars Nuclear reactions inside a star 4-8 Msun : thermonuclear supernovae •4-8 Massive star: Burning until Carbon •Makes Carbon-Oxygen white dwarf •White Dwarf in binary companion accretes mass •Mass reaches Chandrashekhar mass •Core reaches ignition temperature for Carbon •Merges with the binary, exceed Chandrasekhar mass •Begins to collapse. Nuclear fusion sets •Explosion by runaway reaction – Carbon detonation • Nothing remains at the center • Energy of 1051 ergs comes out • Standard candles, geometry of the Universe Thermonuclear Supernovae M >8 Msun : core collapse supernovae • Burns until Iron core is formed at the center • No more burning • Gravitational collapse • First implosion (increasing density and temperature at the center) • Core very hard (nuclear matter density) • Implosion turns into explosion • Neutron star remnant at the centre. • Explosion with 1053 ergs energy • 99% in neutrinos and 1 % in ElectroMagnetic • Scatter all heavy material required for life Core Collapse Supernovae Based on optical spectra Classification H (Type II) (Various types-IIn, IIP, IIb etc.) No H (Type I) Si (Type Ia) No Si (6150Ao) Thermonuclear He (Type Ib) No He (Type Ic) Specific problems: Interaction of the ejected material from the supernovae with their surrounding medium and study them in multiwavebands. Shock velocity of typical SNe are ~1000 times the velocity of the (red supergiant) wind. Hence, SNe observed few years after explosion can probe the history of the progenitor star thousands of years back. 105K 107K Circumstellar environment 109K 1/R2 SN explosion centre Photosphere Outgoing ejecta Reverse shock shell Contact discontinuity Forward shock shell Chevalier & Fransson, astro-ph/0110060 (2001) Radio Emission Radio emission is synchrotron emission due to energetic electrons in the presence of the high energy magnetic fields. Radio emission is absorbed either by free-free absorption from the circumstellar medium or synchrotron self absorption depending upon the mass loss rate, ejecta velocity and electron temperature, magnetic field. Both absorption mechanisms carry relevant information. Free-free absorption: absorption by external medium Information about mass loss rate. 2 . M uw T 2 ff 3 2 s R 3 Synchrotron self absorption: absorption by internal medium Information about magnetic field and the size. ssa 2.5 1.5 B N rel X-ray emission from supernovae Thermal X-rays versus Non-thermal X-rays Date of Explosion : 28 March 1993 SN 1993J Type : IIb Parent Galaxy :M81 Distance : 3.63 Mpc “X-rays from explosion site: 15 years of light curves of SN 1993J”, P. Chandra, et al. 2008, submitted to ApJ “Modeling the light curves of SN 1993J”, T. Nymark, P. Chandra, C. Fransson 2008, accepted for publication in A&A “Unusual behaviour in the radio spectrum of SN 1993J”, P. Chandra 2007, AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 937, pp. 331 “Synchrotron aging and the radio spectrum of SN 1993J”, P. Chandra, A. Ray, S. Bhatnagar 2004 ApJ Letters 604, 97 “The late time radio emission from SN1993J at meter wavelengths”, P. Chandra, A. Ray, S. Bhatnagar 2004 ApJ Letters 604, 97 Understanding the physical mechanisms in the forward shocked shell from observations in low and high frequency radio bands with the GMRT and the VLA. Radio emission in a supernova arises due to synchrotron emission, which arises by the ACCELERATION OF ELECTRONS in presence of an ENHANCED MAGNETIC FIELD. Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope, India Very Large Array, USA On Day 3200…… GMRT+VLA spectrum Chandra, P. et al. F l u x Synchrotron cooling break at 4 GHz GMRT VLA Frequency 1.5 years later…………. ~Day 3750 Synchrotron cooling break at F l u x ~5.5 GHz GMRT VLA Frequency Synchrotron Aging Due to the efficient synchrotron radiation, the electrons, in a magnetic field, with high energies are depleted. . 4 dE 2 e 2 2 2 B sin E 4 7 3m c dt Sync b Q(E)E-g N(E)=kE-g N(E) steepening of spectral index from =(g-1)/2 to g/2 i.e. by 0.5 Ecut off 3e 2 B sin E 3 5 4 m c . E 1 2 bB t F l u x Synchrotron cooling GMRT VLA Frequency break at 4 GHz Synchrotron cooling break F l u x at ~5.5 GHz GMRT VLA Frequency On day 3200 B=330 mG On day 3770 B=280 mG Magnetic Field follows 1/t decline trend Equipartition magnetic field~ 30 mG Equipartition magnetic field is 10 times smaller than actual B, hence magnetic energy density is 4 order of magnitude higher than relativistic energy density d break dt 2 2 R 1/ 2 R 3 / 2 3 1/ 2 1/ 2 B0 t 2t t 2t 20 20 Diffusion acceleration coefficient =(5.3 +/- 3.0) x 1024 cm2 s-1 Radio emission in a supernova arises due to synchrotron emission, which arises by the ACCELERATION OF ELECTRONS in presence of an ENHANCED MAGNETIC FIELD. On Day 3200…… GMRT+VLA spectrum Chandra, P. et al. F l u x Synchrotron cooling break at 4 GHz GMRT VLA Frequency SN 2006X, Patat, Chandra, P. et al. 2007, Science •In Virgo cluster spiral Galaxy M100 •Feb 4, 2006, 70 million light years away •Type Ia supernova SN 2006X, Patat, Chandra, P. et al. 2007, Science •Type Ia supernova (Thermonuclear supernova) •True nature of progenitor star system? •What serves as a companion star? •How to detect signatures of the binary system? •Single degenerate or double degenerate system? How to investigate? Search for signatures of the material tranferred to the accreting white dwarf. •Narrow emission lines •Radio emission •X-ray emission Till date no detection. ABSORPTION OF THE RADIATIONS COMING FROM SUPERNOVA DUE TO THE CIRCUMSTELLAR MEDIUM SURROUNDING SUPERNOVA. Observations of SN 2006X: •Observations with 8.2m VLT on day -2, +14, +61, +121 •Observations with Keck on day +105 •Observations with VLA on day ∼ 400 (Chandra et al. ATel 2007). •Observations with VLA on day ∼ 2 (Stockdale, ATel 729, 2006). •Observations with ChandraXO on day ∼ 10 (Immler, ATel 751, 2006). Na I D2 line Na vs Ca RESULTS •Associated with the progenitor system. •Estimate of Na I ionizing flux: SUV ∼ 5 × 10 50 photons s − 1 • This flux can ionize Na I up to ri ∼ 1018 cm. •Ionization timescale τi < Recombination timescale τr . Increase in ionization fraction till maximum light. Recombination star ts. • When all Na II recombined, no evolution. Agree with results. •Recombination. This implies ne ∼ 10 5 cm − 3 (ONLY PARTIALLY IONIZED HYDROGEN CAN PRODUCE SUCH HIGH NUMBER DENSITY OF ELECTRONS ) •Confinement: rH ≈ 10 16 cm Mass estimation From spectroscopic data: Na I column density N (Na I) ≈ 1012 cm − 1 log(Na/H)= −6.3. For complete recombination, M (H) ≤ 3 × 10−4 ⊙ M. H-alpha luminosity ~ 1034 erg s-1 From radio: 3 − σ upper limit on flux density F (8.46GHz) < 70 µJy. Mass loss rate ≤ 10 − 8 ⊙ M year − 1 CSM mass < 10 − 3 ⊙ M Below detection limit. Nature of the progenitor star •CSM expansion velocity ∼ 50 − 100 km s − 1 . •For R ∼ 1016 cm, material ejected ∼ 50 year before! •Double-degenerate system not possible. Not enough mass. •Single degenerate. Favorable. •Not main sequence stars or compact Helium stars. •High velocity required. •Compatible with Early red giant phase stars. •Possibility of successive novae ejection. COLLABORATORS Claes Fransson (Stockholm Obs) Tanya Nymark (Stockholm Obs) Roger Chevalier (UVA) Dale Frail (NRAO) Alak Ray (TIFR) Shri Kulkarni (Caltech) Brad Cenko (Caltech) Kurt Weiler (NRL) Christopher Stockdale (Marquette) …and …. more SN 1995N in radio and X-ray bands (Chandra et al 2008, to appear in ApJ; Chandra, P. et al. 2005, ApJ) SN 1995N A type IIn supernova Discovered on 1995 May 5 Parent Galaxy MCG-02-38-017 (Distance=24 Mpc) Bremsstrahlung (kT=2.21 keV, NH=2.46 x 1021/cm2. ) Gaussians at 1.03 keV (N=0.34 +/- 0.19 x 10-5) and 0.87 keV (N=0.36 +/- 0.41 x 10-5) NeX NeIX? Constraining the progenitor mass LNeX j NeX ddV ne nNeXI eff h NeX 4 Luminosity of Neon X line ne 6.77 105 f Fraction of NeXI to total Neon 1 2 M Ne 0.016M sun Cascade factor Emissivity of neon X line Number density of neon is ~ 600 cm-3. Compatible with 15 solar mass progenitor star SN 1995N Chandra observations Total counts 758 counts Temperature 2.35 keV Absorption column Depth 1.5 x 10-21 cm-2 0.1-2.4 keV Unabsorbed flux 0.6-1.0 x 10-13 erg cm-2 s-1 0.5-7.0 keV Unabsorbed flux 0.8-1.3 x 10-13 erg cm-2 s-1 Luminosity (0.1-10 keV) 2 x 1040 erg s-1 •How fast ejecta is decelerating? R~t-0.8 •What is the mass loss rate of the progenitor star? M/t = 6 x 10-5 Msun yr-1 •Density structure Density ~ R-8.5 •Density and temperature of the reverse shock Forward shock: T=2.4 x 108 K, Density=3.3 x 105 cm-3 Reverse shock: T=0.9 x 107 K, Density= 2 x 106 cm-3 COLLABORATORS Claes Fransson (Stockholm Obs) Tanya Nymark (Stockholm Obs) Roger Chevalier (UVA) Dale Frail (NRAO) Alak Ray (TIFR) Shri Kulkarni (Caltech) Brad Cenko (Caltech) Kurt Weiler (NRL) Christopher Stockdale (Marquette) …and …. more Synchrotron Aging in SN 1993J Synchrotron losses Adiabatic expansion Diffusive Fermi acceleration Energy losses due to adiabatic expansion V E dE E R t dt Adia R V Ejecta velocity Size of the SN Energy gain due to diffusive Fermi acceleration E EV E(R / t) dE tc 20 20 dt Fermi 2 4( v1 v 2 ) 3v 4 tc v 1 1 v1 v 2 2 v1 Upstream velocity v 2Downstream velocity Spatial diffusion coefficient of the test particles across ambient magnetic field Particle velocity v E E 2 2 2 2 1 dE / dt Total ( R t / 20 ) E bB E t E For t and B B0 / t (Fransson & Bjornsson, 1998, ApJ, 509, 861) Break frequency . R 1 / 2 1/ 2 break B t 2t 20 3 0 . 2 Poonam Chandra 2 . R 1 / 2 1/ 2 break B t 2t 20 3 0 . 2 2 Acceleration diffusion constant Ball & Kirk 1992 For SN 1987A 21024 cm2 sec-1 (Ball & Kirk, 1992, ApJL) Scaled value of diffusion coefficient for 1993J 4 2 10 24 2.96 10 24 2.7 cm2 sec-1