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Page 1: Observational aspects of Cosmological Transient Objects Poonam Chandra Royal Military College of Canada

Observational aspects of Cosmological Transient Objects

Poonam ChandraRoyal Military College of Canada

Page 2: Observational aspects of Cosmological Transient Objects Poonam Chandra Royal Military College of Canada

Outline• Supernovae and Gamma Ray Bursts –

Introduction• Supernovae : Physics from multiwaveband

observations• Ongoing and Future projects• Gamma Ray Bursts – afterglows• Multiwaveband modeling of afterglows• Importance of radio observations• Future of GRB afterglows in view of ALMA and

EVLA

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Supernovae and Gamma Ray Bursts: Stellar deaths

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8MΘ ≤ M ≤ 30MΘ

Supernova

M ≥ 30MΘ

Gamma Ray Burst

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Supernovae

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Circumstellar interaction in supernovae

CS wind

Explosion center

Reverse Shock

Forward Shock

Ejecta

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• Trace back the history of the progenitor star since wind velocity ~10 km/s and ejecta speeds ~10,000 km/s.

•Supernova observed one year after explosion gives information about the progenitor star 1000 years before explosion!!!

Forward Shock

Reverse Shock

CS wind

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• X-ray and Radio emission

• Information about the mass loss rate of the star, density of the shocked ejecta, temperatures, density of the CSM

Radio

X-ray

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• Radio absorption process.

• Synchrotron self absorption (SSA): magnetic field, size of the shell.

• Free-free absorption (FFA): Mass loss rate of the progenitor star.

FFA

SSA

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• More fundamental properties, such as microphysics of acceleration of electron, equipartition energy density distribution.

Radio

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GMRT

VLA

Synchrotron cooling break at

4 GHz

Frequency

FluxmJy

Synchrotron cooling break

at ~5.5 GHz

GMRT

VLA

Frequency

FluxmJy

SN 1993JChandra et al. 2004a, 2004b

On day 3200

B=330 mG

On day 3770

B=280 mG

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SN 2010jl: Chandra Observations

Chandra et al. 2012a

Dec 2010

Oct 2011

Column density=3E+23 cm-2

Column density=1E+24 cm-2Temperature 80 KeV

Speed 7000 km/s

External X-ray absorption

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Ongoing and future project: Type IIn Supernovae

• Suggested by Schlegel 1990.• Unusual optical characteristics:

– Very high bolometric and Ha luminosities– Ha emission, a narrow peak sitting atop of broad

emission– Slow evolution and blue spectral continuum

• Late infrared excess• Indicative of dense circumstellar medium.• Very diverse in nature

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Peak radio and X-ray luminosities

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Multiwaveband Study

• Radio: circumstellar medium characteristics

• X-ray: Shock temperature, ejecta structure.

• Optical: Temporal evolution, chemical composition, explosion, distance

• IR: circumstellar dust nebula surrounding SN.

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Multiwaveband campaign to understand Type IIn supernovae

• Observe all the Type IIN supernovae with the Very Large Array within 150 Mpc distance (PI: Chandra).

• If bright enough, do spectroscopy with XMM-Newton (PI: Chandra).

• Follow radio bright and/or Swift detected Type IIN supernova with ChandraXO. Get spectroscopy, separate from nearby contamination (PI: Chandra).

• If detected in radio, follow with Swift-XRT (PI: Soderberg).

• NIR photometry with PAIRITEL (PI: Soderberg).

Chandra, Soderberg, Chevalier, Fransson, Chugai

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SN Days Detection Distance ATel2005kd 640-1173 Y 64 11822006jd 404-1030 Y 79 12972007gy 72-418 N - -2007nx 22-372 N - -2007pk 2-342 N 71 12712007rt 49-329 N 96 13592008B 21 N 78 13662008J 254-336 N 66 -2008S 8-308 N 5.6 13822008X 12 N 27 14102008aj 6-300 N 108 1409

2008am 40-337 N - 14082008be 27-268 N 123 14702008bk 4-13 N 4 1452,55,652008bm 252 N - 1865,692008cg 39-222 N - 15942008cu 156 N 152 -2008en 132 N 160 -2008es 130 N - 17762008gm 52 N 50 -2008ip 5-124 N 65 18912009ay 15 N 95 -2009dn 55 N - -2009fs 7 N - 2070

VLA

obse

rvati

ons

of T

ype

IIn s

uper

nova

e

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Absorption Mechanism: SN 2006jd (Chandra et al. 2012b)

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FLAT DENSITY PROFILE -1.45, Chandra et al. 2012b

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X-ray light curves (Chandra et al. 2012b)

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TWO SEPARATE KINDS OF

TYPE IIN SUPERNOVAE!!!!

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Gamma Ray Bursts

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Gamma Ray Bursts

• AG is synchrotron emission produced by electrons accelerated in a relativistic shock interacting with the circumburst medium.

• Entire temporal and spectral evolution is governed by simple physical parameters– Blast kinetic energy: Ek

– Circumburst density: n(r)– Shock microphysics: p,εe,εb

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Multiwaveband modeling• Long lived afterglow with powerlaw decays• Spectrum broadly consistent with the synchrotron.

• Measure Fm, nm, na, nc and obtain Ek (Kinetic energy), n (density), ee, eb (micro parameters), theta (jet break), p (electron spectral index).

GRB 070125 (Chandra et al. 2008)GRB 090423 (Chandra et al. 2010)

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Radio Observations

• Late time follow up- accurate calorimetry Eg. 970528 Frail et al.

• Scintillation- constraint on size (GRB 070125)• VLBI- fireball expansion (GRB 030329)• Density structure: wind-type versus constant

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GRB 070125: Scintillation (fireball >2 microarcsec) (Chandra et al. 2008)

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Detectable at high redshifts in radio bands due to negative K-correction

• Effect was first noted by Ciardi & Loeb (2000)

• Steep synchrotron self-absorption (ν2) partially counteracts dL

2 diming

• Time dilation (1+z) helps to probe the early epoch of reverse shock

• From z=2 to z=10 flux density drops only 40%

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Frail et al. (2006)

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Reverse shock emission from GRB 090423 (Chandra et al. 2010)

Reverse shock seen in GRB 050904 (z=6.26) too

RS seen in PdBI data too on day 1.87

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GRB 090423 (Chandra et al. 2010)

• Highest redshift GRB at z=8.2• Highest redshift object of any kind known in

our Universe.• Must have exploded just 630 million years

after the Big Bang.

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Multiwaveband modeling of GRB 090423 (Chandra et al. 2010)

Last Chandrameasurement

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Multiwaveband modeling using Yost et al. 2004

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Swift Era: Missing Jets?

Fewer than 10% of all Swift X-ray light curves show breaks consistent with a jet-like outflow.

Koceveski & Butler (2008)

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Swift Complications: Soft Energy Response

• 15-350 keV BAT bandpass provides limited spectral coverage

• Often miss Epeak

• Leads to large uncertainties in Eγ,iso

Abdo et al., 2009

GRB 090902B

Swift

energy response

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Swift Complications: Redshift

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Median Swift redshift 2X higher. Shifts tjet to later times.

From Palli Jakobssson webpageComplete to November 2009

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Swift Complications: Energy Injection

• Bright flares and long-lived plateau phases in X-ray afterglows

• Can inject significant amount of energy into forward shock (Ek)

Falcone et al. 2005

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Inverse-Compton in X-rays: GRB 070125 (Chandra et al. 2008)

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Detection rate in radio – 30% (Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

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Post Swift detection rate– 30% (redshift independent) (Chandra et al. 2012 )

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

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Radio detectability of GRB afterglows

• Dependence on fluence• Dependence on Isotropic Energy• Dependence on X-ray flux• Dependence on optical flux

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

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Future of GRB Physics: A seismic shift in radio afterglow studies

• Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA)• 20 times more sensitive than the VLA.

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

SHB

XRFSN-GRB

LGRB

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ALMA. What can we expect?

• Years of (painful) mm/submm work at BIMA, OVRO, PdBI, JCMT, IRAM 30-m, CSO and CARMA.

• A 30% detection rate. – Radio & optical selected sample– ~2.5 mJy at t=7-14 days (too late)

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Future: Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)

Accurate determination of kinetic energy

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Future: ALMA Debate between wind versus ISM solved

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• Swift had expected to find many RS

• At most, 1:25 optical AG have RS

• Does not explain why prompt radio emission is seen more frequently.

• About 1:4 radio AG may be RS

• Possible Explanation: The RS spectral peak is shifted out of the optical band to lower frequencies

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Kul

karn

i et

al.

(199

9)

Reverse shock in radio GRBs Chandra et al. (to be submitted)

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• Swift had expected to find many RS

• At most, 1:25 optical AG have RS

• Does not explain why prompt radio emission is seen more frequently.

• About 1:4 radio AG may be RS

• Possible Explanation: The RS spectral peak is shifted out of the optical band to lower frequencies

51

Kul

karn

i et

al.

(199

9)

Reverse shock in radio GRBs Chandra et al. (to be submitted)

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• mm emission from RS if observed few hours after the burst is bright, redshift-independent as effects of time-dilation compensates for frequency-redshift. (no extinction or scintillation). ALMA will be ideal with 75 uJy/4 min sensitivity.

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Inoue, Omukai, Ciardi (2007)

Reverse shock emission from high-z GRBs and implications for future observations

Inoue, Omuka & Ciardi (2006).

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Molecular and Atomic Absorption Lines

• Optical/NIR spectroscopy of bright GRB AGs has measured Z, Tg, n and ΔV of high z SF

• ALMA (z>5)– HD 112 um (Pop III coolant)– [OI] 63.2 um (higher Z coolant)– [CII] 158 um (will replace CO)– H2 28.3 um (too hard?)

• ALMA (z=1-4)– CO lower transitions– HCN, HCO+, etc

• Eventually the AG goes away

– Probe global galaxy properties– Image dust and line emission Inoue, Omuka & Ciardi (2006).

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(Chandra et al. 2012, accepted in ApJ)

Density

Kinetic Energy Redshift

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Collaborators

• Dale Frail• Roger Chevalier• Alak Ray• Alicia Soderberg• Shri Kulkarni• Brad Cenko• Claes Fransson• Nikolai Chugai• Edo Berger


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