9 results on '"GARNAVICH, PETER"'
Search Results
2. Late-Time HST Photometry of SN 1994I: Hints of Positron Annihilation Energy Deposition 1
- Author
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Clocchiatti, Alejandro, Wheeler, J. Craig, Kirshner, Robert P., Branch, David, Challis, Peter, Chevalier, Roger A., Filippenko, Alexei V., Fransson, Claes, Garnavich, Peter, Leibundgut, Bruno, Panagia, Nino, Phillips, Mark M., Suntzeff, Nicholas B., Höflich, Peter A., and Gallardo, José
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- 2008
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3. The Peculiar SN 2005hk: Do Some Type Ia Supernovae Explode as Deflagrations? 1, 2, 3
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Phillips, M. M., Li, Weidong, Frieman, Joshua A., Blinnikov, S. I., DePoy, Darren, Prieto, José L., Milne, P., Contreras, Carlos, Folatelli, Gastón, Morrell, Nidia, Hamuy, Mario, Suntzeff, Nicholas B., Roth, Miguel, González, Sergio, Krzeminski, Wojtek, Filippenko, Alexei V., Freedman, Wendy L., Chornock, Ryan, Jha, Saurabh, Madore, Barry F., Persson, S. E., Burns, Christopher R., Wyatt, Pamela, Murphy, David, Foley, Ryan J., Ganeshalingam, Mohan, Serduke, Franklin J. D., Krisciunas, Kevin, Bassett, Bruce, Becker, Andrew, Dilday, Ben, Eastman, J., Garnavich, Peter M., Holtzman, Jon, Kessler, Richard, Lampeitl, Hubert, Marriner, John, Frank, S., Marshall, J. L., Miknaitis, Gajus, Sako, Masao, Schneider, Donald P., van der Heyden, Kurt, and Yasuda, Naoki
- Published
- 2007
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4. The Progenitor of Supernova 1993J Revisited 1
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Van Dyk, Schuyler D., Garnavich, Peter M., Filippenko, Alexei V., Höflich, Peter, Kirshner, Robert P., Kurucz, Robert L., and Challis, Peter
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- 2002
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5. THE EFFECT OF WEAK LENSING ON DISTANCE ESTIMATES FROM SUPERNOVAE.
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Smith, Mathew, Bacon, David J., Nichol, Robert C., Campbell, Heather, Clarkson, Chris, Maartens, Roy, D'Andrea, Chris B., Bassett, Bruce A., Cinabro, David, Finley, David A., Frieman, Joshua A., Galbany, Lluis, Garnavich, Peter M., Olmstead, Matthew D., Schneider, Donald P., Shapiro, Charles, and Sollerman, Jesper
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SUPERNOVAE ,CATACLYSMIC variable stars ,GALACTIC X-ray sources ,GALAXIES ,ASTRONOMY - Abstract
Using a sample of 608 Type Ia supernovae from the SDSS-II and BOSS surveys, combined with a sample of foreground galaxies from SDSS-II, we estimate the weak lensing convergence for each supernova line of sight. We find that the correlation between this measurement and the Hubble residuals is consistent with the prediction from lensing (at a significance of 1.7σ). Strong correlations are also found between the residuals and supernova nuisance parameters after a linear correction is applied. When these other correlations are taken into account, the lensing signal is detected at 1.4σ. We show, for the first time, that distance estimates from supernovae can be improved when lensing is incorporated, by including a new parameter in the SALT2 methodology for determining distance moduli. The recovered value of the new parameter is consistent with the lensing prediction. Using cosmic microwave background data from WMAP7, H
0 data from Hubble Space Telescope and Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Baryon acoustic oscillations measurements, we find the best-fit value of the new lensing parameter and show that the central values and uncertainties on Ωm and w are unaffected. The lensing of supernovae, while only seen at marginal significance in this low-redshift sample, will be of vital importance for the next generation of surveys, such as DES and LSST, which will be systematics-dominated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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6. HIGH-VELOCITY LINE FORMING REGIONS IN THE TYPE Ia SUPERNOVA 2009ig.
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Marion, G. H., Vinko, Jozsef, Wheeler, J. Craig, Foley, Ryan J., Hsiao, Eric Y., Brown, Peter J., Challis, Peter, Filippenko, Alexei V., Garnavich, Peter, Kirshner, Robert P., Landsman, Wayne B., Parrent, Jerod T., Pritchard, Tyler A., Roming, Peter W. A., Silverman, Jeffrey M., and Wang, Xiaofeng
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SUPERNOVAE ,STELLAR luminosity function ,STELLAR spectra ,ABSORPTION spectra ,ASTROPHYSICS research - Abstract
We report measurements and analysis of high-velocity (HVF) (>20,000 km s
–1 ) and photospheric absorption features in a series of spectra of the Type Ia supernova (SN) 2009ig obtained between –14 days and +13 days with respect to the time of maximum B-band luminosity (B-max). We identify lines of Si II, Si III, S II, Ca II, and Fe II that produce both HVF and photospheric-velocity (PVF) absorption features. SN 2009ig is unusual for the large number of lines with detectable HVF in the spectra, but the light-curve parameters correspond to a slightly overluminous but unexceptional SN Ia (MB = –19.46 mag and Δm15 (B) = 0.90 mag). Similarly, the Si II λ6355 velocity at the time of B-max is greater than “normal” for an SN Ia, but it is not extreme (vSi = 13,400 km s–1 ). The –14 days and –13 days spectra clearly resolve HVF from Si II λ6355 as separate absorptions from a detached line forming region. At these very early phases, detached HVF are prevalent in all lines. From –12 days to –6 days, HVF and PVF are detected simultaneously, and the two line forming regions maintain a constant separation of about 8000 km s–1 . After –6 days all absorption features are PVF. The observations of SN 2009ig provide a complete picture of the transition from HVF to PVF. Most SNe Ia show evidence for HVF from multiple lines in spectra obtained before –10 days, and we compare the spectra of SN 2009ig to observations of other SNe. We show that each of the unusual line profiles for Si II λ6355 found in early-time spectra of SNe Ia correlate to a specific phase in a common development sequence from HVF to PVF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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7. THE DISCOVERY OF THE MOST DISTANT KNOWN TYPE Ia SUPERNOVA AT REDSHIFT 1.914.
- Author
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JONES, DAVID O., RODNEY, STEVEN A., RIESS, ADAM G., MOBASHER, BAHRAM, DAHLEN, TOMAS, MCCULLY, CURTIS, FREDERIKSEN, TEDDY F., CASERTANO, STEFANO, HJORTH, JENS, KEETON, CHARLES R., KOEKEMOER, ANTON, STROLGER, LOUIS-GREGORY, WIKLIND, TOMMY G., CHALLIS, PETER, GRAUR, OR, HAYDEN, BRIAN, PATEL, BRANDON, WEINER, BENJAMIN J., FILIPPENKO, ALEXEI V., and GARNAVICH, PETER
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GALAXY spectra ,ASTRONOMICAL spectroscopy ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology ,SOLAR activity - Abstract
We present the discovery of a Type Ia supernova (SN) at redshift z = 1.914 from the CANDELS multi-cycle treasury program on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This SN was discovered in the infrared using the Wide- Field Camera 3, and it is the highest-redshift Type Ia SN yet observed. We classify this object as a SN Ia by comparing its light curve and spectrum with those of a large sample of Type Ia and core-collapse SNe. Its apparent magnitude is consistent with that expected from the ΛCDM concordance cosmology.We discuss the use of spectral evidence for classification of z > 1.5 SNe Ia using HST grism simulations, finding that spectral data alone can frequently rule out SNe II, but distinguishing between SNe Ia and SNe Ib/c can require prohibitively long exposures. In such cases, a quantitative analysis of the light curve may be necessary for classification. Our photometric and spectroscopic classification methods can aid the determination of SN rates and cosmological parameters from the full high-redshift CANDELS SN sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. HST-COS OBSERVATIONS OF HYDROGEN, HELIUM, CARBON, AND NITROGEN EMISSION FROM THE SN 1987A REVERSE SHOCK.
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France, Kevin, Mccray, Richard, Penton, Steven V., Kirshner, Robert P., Challis, Peter, Laming, J. Martin, Bouchet, Patrice, Chevalier, Roger, Garnavich, Peter M., Fransson, Claes, Heng, Kevin, Larsson, Josefin, Lawrence, Stephen, Lundqvist, Peter, Panagia, Nino, Pun, Chun S. J., Smith, Nathan, Sollerman, Jesper, Sonneborn, George, and Sugerman, Ben
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SUPERNOVAE ,X-ray astronomy ,HELIUM ,CIRCUMSTELLAR matter ,SHOCK waves - Abstract
We present the most sensitive ultraviolet observations of Supernova 1987A to date. Imaging spectroscopy from the Hubble Space Telescope-Cosmic Origins Spectrograph shows many narrow (Δv ~ 300 km s
-1 ) emission lines from the circumstellar ring, broad (Δv ~ 10-20 x 10³ km s-1 ) emission lines from the reverse shock, and ultraviolet continuum emission. The high signal-to-noise ratio (>40 per resolution element) broad Lyα emission is excited by soft X-ray and EUV heating of mostly neutral gas in the circumstellar ring and outer supernova debris. The ultraviolet continuum at λ > 1350 Å can be explained by H I two-photon (2s ²S1/2 -1s ²S1/2 ) emission from the same region. We confirm our earlier, tentative detection of N v λ 1240 emission from the reverse shock and present the first detections of broad He II λ 1640, C IV λ1550, and N IV] λ 1486 emission lines from the reverse shock. The helium abundance in the high-velocity material is He/H = 0.14 ± 0.06. The N v/Hα line ratio requires partial ion-electron equilibration (Te /Tp ≈ 0.14-0.35). We find that the N/C abundance ratio in the gas crossing the reverse shock is significantly higher than that in the circumstellar ring, a result that may be attributed to chemical stratification in the outer envelope of the supernova progenitor. The N/C abundance may have been stratified prior to the ring expulsion, or this result may indicate continued CNO processing in the progenitor subsequent to the expulsion of the circumstellar ring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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9. THE SDSS-II SUPERNOVA SURVEY: PARAMETERIZING THE TYPE Ia SUPERNOVA RATE AS A FUNCTION OF HOST GALAXY PROPERTIES.
- Author
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Smith, Mathew, Nichol, Robert C., Dilday, Benjamin, Marriner, John, Kessler, Richard, Bassett, Bruce, Cinabro, David, Frieman, Joshua, Garnavich, Peter, Jha, Saurabh W., Lampeitl, Hubert, Sako, Masao, Schneider, Donald P., and Sollerman, Jesper
- Subjects
GALACTIC redshift ,SUPERNOVAE ,STELLAR mass ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology ,EXTRAGALACTIC distances - Abstract
Using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Supernova Survey-II (SDSS-II SN Survey), we measure the rate of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) as a function of galaxy properties at intermediate redshift. A sample of 342 SNe Ia with 0.05 < z < 0.25 is constructed. Using broadband photometry and redshifts, we use the PÉGASE.2 spectral energy distributions to estimate host galaxy stellar masses and recent star formation rates (SFRs). We find that the rate of SNe Ia per unit stellar mass is significantly higher (by a factor of ∼30) in highly star-forming galaxies compared to passive galaxies. When parameterizing the SN Ia rate (SNR
Ia ) based on host galaxy properties, we find that the rate of SNe Ia in passive galaxies is not linearly proportional to the stellar mass; instead an SNRIa ∝M0.68 is favored. However, such a parameterization does not describe the observed SNRIa in star-forming galaxies. The SNRIa in star-forming galaxies is well fitted by SNRIa = (0.41 ± 0.15) × 10–10 M0.72 ± 0.15 + (0.65 ± 0.25) × 10–3 SFR1.01 ± 0.22 (statistical errors only), where M is the host galaxy stellar mass (in M☼ ) and SFR is the SFR (in M☼ yr–1 ). We show that our results, for SNe Ia in passive galaxies, are consistent with those at higher redshifts (favoring SNRIa ∝M) when accounting for the difference in the ages of our galaxies. This suggests that the rate of SNe Ia is correlated with the age of the stellar population. The MLCS extinction parameter, AV , is similar in passive and moderately star-forming galaxies, but we find indications that it is smaller, on average, in highly star-forming galaxies. This result appears to be driven by a deficit of the reddest (AV > 0.15) SNe Ia in highly star-forming galaxies. We consider that the high levels of dust in these systems may be obscuring the reddest and faintest SNe Ia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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