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Featured researches published by A. Magazzù.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

Detection of the optical afterglow of GRB 000630: Implications for dark bursts ?

Johan Peter Uldall Fynbo; B. L. Jensen; J. Gorosabel; J. Hjorth; H. Pedersen; P. Møller; Terence S. Abbott; A. J. Castro-Tirado; D. M. Delgado; J. Greiner; Arne A. Henden; A. Magazzù; N. Masetti; S. Merlino; J. Masegosa; Roy Ostensen; E. Palazzi; E. Pian; He Schwarz; T. L. Cline; C. Guidorzi; J Goldsten; K. Hurley; E. Mazets; T McClanahan; E. Montanari; R. Starr; J Trombka

We present the discovery of the optical transient of the long{duration gamma-ray burst GRB 000630. The optical transient was detected with the Nordic Optical Telescope 21.1 hours after the burst. At the time of discovery the magnitude of the transient was R =2 3:04 0:08. The transient displayed a power-law decline characterized by a decay slope of = 1:035 0:097. A deep image obtained 25 days after the burst shows no indication of a contribution from a supernova or a host galaxy at the position of the transient. The closest detected galaxy is a R =2 4:68 0:15 galaxy 2.0 arcsec north of the transient. The magnitudes of the optical afterglows of GRB 980329, GRB 980613 and GRB 000630 were all R > 23 less than 24 hours from the burst epoch. We discuss the implications of this for our understanding of GRBs without detected optical transients. We conclude that i) based on the gamma-ray properties of the current sample we cannot conclude that GRBs with no detected OTs belong to another class of GRBs than GRBs with detected OTs and ii) the majority (>75%) of GRBs for which searches for optical afterglow have been unsuccessful are consistent with no detection if they were similar to bursts like GRB 000630 at optical wavelengths.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

Exploring the substellar temperature regime down to ∼550 K

B. Burningham; D. J. Pinfield; S. K. Leggett; Motohide Tamura; P. W. Lucas; Derek Homeier; A. C. Day-Jones; Hugh R. A. Jones; J. R. A. Clarke; Miki Ishii; Masayuki Kuzuhara; N. Lodieu; M. R. Zapatero Osorio; B. P. Venemans; D. Mortlock; D. Barrado y Navascués; E. L. Martín; A. Magazzù

We report the discovery of three very late T dwarfs in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Third Data Release: ULAS J101721.40+011817.9 (ULAS1017), ULAS J123828.51+095351.3 (ULAS1238) and ULAS J133553.45+113005.2 (ULAS1335). We detail optical and near-infrared photometry for all three sources, and mid-infrared photometry for ULAS1335. We use near-infrared spectra of each source to assign spectral types T8p (ULAS1017), T8.5 (ULAS1238) and T9 (ULAS1335) to these objects. ULAS1017 is classed as a peculiar T8 (T8p) due to appearing as a T8 dwarf in the J-band, whilst exhibiting H and K-band flux ratios consistent with a T6 classification. Through comparison to BT-Settl model spectra we estimate that ULAS1017 has 750K T8 dwarfs to the rest of the T dwarf sequence, the suggestion of the Y0 spectral class for these objects is premature. Comparison of model spectra with that of ULAS1335 suggest a temperature below 600K, possibly combined with low-gravity and/or high-metallicity. We find ULAS1335 to be extremely red in near to mid-infrared colours, with H [4.49] = 4.34 ± 0.04 . This is the reddest near to mid-infrared colour yet observed for a T dwarf. The near to mid-infrared spectral energy distribution of ULAS1335 further supports Teff < 600K, and we estimate Teff � 550 600K for ULAS1335. We estimate that ULAS1335 has an age of 0.6–5.3 Gyr, a mass of 15–31 MJ and lies at a distance of 8–12 pc.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2008

Fifteen new T dwarfs discovered in the UKIDSS Large Area Survey

D. J. Pinfield; B. Burningham; Motohide Tamura; S. K. Leggett; N. Lodieu; P. W. Lucas; D. Mortlock; S. J. Warren; Derek Homeier; Miki Ishii; Niall R. Deacon; Richard G. McMahon; Paul C. Hewett; M. R. Zapatero Osori; E. L. Martín; Hugh R. A. Jones; B. P. Venemans; A. C. Day-Jones; P. D. Dobbie; S. L. Folkes; S. Dye; F. Allard; Isabelle Baraffe; D. Barrado y Navascués; S. L. Casewell; Kuenley Chiu; Gilles Chabrier; F. Clarke; S. T. Hodgkin; A. Magazzù

We present the discovery of fifteen new T2.5-T7.5 dwarfs (with estimated distances between �24–93pc), identified in the first three main data releases of the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey. This brings the total number of T dwarfs discovered in the Large Area Survey (to date) to 28. These discoveries are confirmed by near infrared spectroscopy, from which we derive spectral types on the unified scheme of Burgasser et al. (2006). Seven of the new T dwarfs have spectral types of T2.5-T4.5, five have spectral types of T5-T5.5, one is a T6.5p, and two are T7-7.5. We assess spectral morphology and colours to identify T dwarfs in our sample that may have non-typical physical properties (by comparison to solar neighbourhood populations), and find that one of these new T dwarfs may be metal poor, three may have low surface gravity, and one may have high surface gravity. The colours of the full sample of LAS T dwarfs show a possible trend to bluer Y J with decreasing effective temperature, and some interesting colour changes in J H and z J (deserving further investigation) beyond T8. The LAS T dwarf sample from the first and second main data releases show good evidence for a consistent level of completion to J=19. By accounting for the main sources of incompleteness (selection, follow-up and spatial) as well as the effects of unresolved binarity and Malmquist bias, we estimate that there are 17±4 >T4 dwarfs in the J 619 volume of the LAS second data release. Comparing this to theoretical predictions is most consistent with a sub-stellar mass function exponent α between -1.0 and 0. This is consistent with the latest 2MASS/SDSS constraint (which is based on lower number statistics), and is significantly lower than the α � 1.0 suggested by L dwarf field populations, possibly a result of the lower mass range probed by the T dwarf class.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

The extraordinarily bright optical afterglow of GRB 991208 and its host galaxy

A. J. Castro-Tirado; V. V. Sokolov; J. Gorosabel; J. M. Castro Cerón; J. Greiner; R.A.M.J. Wijers; B. L. Jensen; J. Hjorth; Sune Toft; H. Pedersen; E. Palazzi; E. Pian; N. Masetti; Ram Sagar; V. Mohan; A.K. Pandey; S.B. Pandey; S.N. Dodonov; T. A. Fatkhullin; V. L. Afanasiev; V. N. Komarova; A. V. Moiseev; R. Hudec; V. Simon; Paul M. Vreeswijk; E. Rol; Sylvio Klose; Bringfried Stecklum; Maria Rosa Zapatero-Osorio; Nicola Caon

Broad-band optical observations of the extraordi- narily bright optical afterglow of the intense gamma-ray burst GRB 991208 started � 2.1 days after the event and continued until 4 Apr 2000. The flux decay constant of the optical after- glow in the R-band is 2.30 ± 0.07 up to � 5 days, which


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013

76 T dwarfs from the UKIDSS LAS: benchmarks, kinematics and an updated space density

B. Burningham; C. V. Cardoso; Leigh Smith; S. K. Leggett; R. L. Smart; Andrew W. Mann; Saurav Dhital; Philip W. Lucas; C. G. Tinney; D. J. Pinfield; Z. H. Zhang; Caroline V. Morley; Didier Saumon; K. Aller; S. P. Littlefair; Derek Homeier; N. Lodieu; Niall R. Deacon; Mark S. Marley; L. van Spaandonk; D. Baker; F. Allard; A. H. Andrei; J. Canty; J. R. A. Clarke; A. C. Day-Jones; Trent J. Dupuy; Jonathan J. Fortney; J. Gomes; Miki Ishii

We report the discovery of 76 new T dwarfs from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Large Area Survey (LAS). Near-infrared broad- and narrow-band photometry and spectroscopy are presented for the new objects, along with Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) and warm-Spitzer photometry. Proper motions for 128 UKIDSS T dwarfs are presented from a new two epoch LAS proper motion catalogue. We use these motions to identify two new benchmark systems: LHS 6176AB, a T8p+M4 pair and HD 118865AB, a T5.5+F8 pair. Using age constraints from the primaries and evolutionary models to constrain the radii, we have estimated their physical properties from their bolometric luminosity. We compare the colours and properties of known benchmark T dwarfs to the latest model atmospheres and draw two principal conclusions. First, it appears that the H - [4.5] and J - W2 colours are more sensitive to metallicity than has previously been recognized, such that differences in metallicity may dominate over differences in T-eff when considering relative properties of cool objects using these colours. Secondly, the previously noted apparent dominance of young objects in the late-T dwarf sample is no longer apparent when using the new model grids and the expanded sample of late-T dwarfs and benchmarks. This is supported by the apparently similar distribution of late-T dwarfs and earlier type T dwarfs on reduced proper motion diagrams that we present. Finally, we present updated space densities for the late-T dwarfs, and compare our values to simulation predictions and those from WISE.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

New Brown Dwarfs in the Pleiades Cluster

M. R. Zapatero Osorio; R. Rebolo; Eduardo L. Martin; Gibor Basri; A. Magazzù; S. T. Hodgkin; R. F. Jameson; M. R. Cossburn

We present intermediate- and low-resolution optical spectroscopy (650-915 nm) of seven faint, very red objects (20>I≥17.8, I-Z≥ 0.5) discovered in a CCD-based IZ survey covering an area of 1 deg2 in the central region of the Pleiades open cluster. The observed spectra show that these objects are very cool dwarfs having spectral types in the range M6-M9. Five out of the seven objects can be considered Pleiades members on the basis of their radial velocities, Hα emissions, and other gravity-sensitive atomic features like the Na I doublet at 818.3 and 819.5 nm. According to current evolutionary models, the masses of these new objects range from roughly 80 MJup for the hottest in the sample down to 45 MJup for Roque 4, the coolest and faintest confirmed member. These observations prove that the cloud fragmentation process extends well into the brown dwarf realm, suggesting a rise in the initial mass function below the substellar limit.


Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplement Series | 1999

Brown dwarfs in the Pleiades cluster - III. A deep IZ survey

M. R. Zapatero Osorio; R. Rebolo; E. L. Martín; M. R. Cossburn; A. Magazzù; Iain A. Steele; R. F. Jameson

We present the results of a deep CCD-basedIZ photometric survey of a 1d eg 2 area in the central region of the Pleiades Galactic open cluster. The magnitude cov- erage of our survey (from I 17:5 down to 22) allows us to detect substellar candidates with masses between 0.075 and 0.03M. Details of the photometric reduction and se- lection criteria are given. Finder charts prepared from the I-band images are provided.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The type Ib SN 1999dn: one year of photometric and spectroscopic monitoring

Stefano Benetti; M. Turatto; S. Valenti; Andrea Pastorello; Enrico Cappellaro; M. T. Botticella; F. Bufano; F. Ghinassi; A. Harutyunyan; C. Inserra; A. Magazzù; Ferdinando Patat; M. L. Pumo; S. Taubenberger

Extensive optical and near-infrared observations of the Type Ib supernova (SNIb) 1999dn are presented, covering the first year after explosion. These new data turn this object, already considered a prototypical SNIb, into one of the best observed objects of its class. The light curve of SN 1999dn is mostly similar in shape to that of other SNeIb but with a moderately faint peak (M v = —17.2mag). From the bolometric light curve and ejecta expansion velocities, we estimate that about 0.11 M ⊙ of 56 Ni were produced during the explosion and that the total ejecta mass was 4―6 M ⊙ with a kinetic energy of at least 5 x 10 51 erg. The spectra of SN 1999dn at various epochs are similar to those of other stripped envelope SNe showing clear presence of H at early epochs. The high explosion energy and ejected mass, along with the small flux ratio [Ca II]/[I I] measured in the nebular spectrum, together with the lack of signatures of dust formation and the moderate metallicity environment is not inconsistent with a single massive progenitor (M ZAMS ≥ 23-25 M ⊙ ) for SN 1999dn.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Two T dwarfs from the UKIDSS early data release

Timothy Kendall; Motohide Tamura; C. G. Tinney; Eric Martin; Miki Ishii; D. J. Pinfield; P. W. Lucas; Huw Jones; S. K. Leggett; S. Dye; Paul C. Hewett; F. Allard; Isabelle Baraffe; D. Barrado y Navascués; Giovanni Carraro; S. L. Casewell; Gilles Chabrier; R. J. Chappelle; F. Clarke; A. C. Day-Jones; Niall R. Deacon; P. D. Dobbie; S. L. Folkes; Nigel Hambly; S. T. Hodgkin; Tadashi Nakajima; R. F. Jameson; N. Lodieu; A. Magazzù; Mark J. McCaughrean

Context: We report on the first ultracool dwarf discoveries from the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Large Area Survey Early Data Release (LAS EDR), in particular the discovery of T dwarfs which are fainter and more distant than those found using the 2MASS and SDSS surveys. Aims: We aim to show that our methodologies for searching the ~27 deg 2 of the LAS EDR are successful for finding both L and T dwarfs via cross-correlation with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) DR4 release. While the area searched so far is small, the numbers of objects found shows great promise for near-future releases of the LAS and great potential for finding large numbers of such dwarfs. Methods: Ultracool dwarfs are selected by combinations of their YJH ( K )


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Pulsation in the atmosphere of the roAp star HD 24712 - I. Spectroscopic observations and radial velocity measurements

T. Ryabchikova; Mikhail Sachkov; W. W. Weiss; T. Kallinger; Oleg Kochukhov; S. Bagnulo; I. Ilyin; J. D. Landstreet; F. Leone; G. Lo Curto; T. Lüftinger; D. Lyashko; A. Magazzù

UKIDSS colours and SDSS DR4 z - J and i - z colours, or, lower limits on these red optical/infrared colours in the case of DR4 dropouts. After passing visual inspection tests, candidates have been followed up by methane imaging and spectroscopy at 4 m and 8 m-class facilities. Results: Our main result is the discovery following CH 4 imaging and spectroscopy of a T4.5 dwarf, ULAS J 1452+0655, lying ~80 pc distant. A further T dwarf candidate, ULAS J 1301+0023, has very similar CH4 colours but has not yet been confirmed spectroscopically. We also report on the identification of a brighter L0 dwarf, and on the selection of a list of LAS objects designed to probe for T-like dwarfs to the survey J -band limit. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the combination of the UKIDSS LAS and SDSS surveys provide an excellent tool for identifying L and T dwarfs down to much fainter limits than previously possible. Our discovery of one confirmed and one probable T dwarf in the EDR is consistent with expectations from the previously measured T dwarf density on the sky.

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E. Pian

Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

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E. L. Martín

Spanish National Research Council

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S. Valenti

University of California

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Sylvio Klose

University of California

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