Brandon Wiggins
Brigham Young University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Brandon Wiggins.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Emmanouil Chatzopoulos; Daniel R. van Rossum; Wheeler J. Craig; Daniel J. Whalen; Joseph Smidt; Brandon Wiggins
Pair-instability supernovae (PISNe) have been suggested as candidates for some superluminous supernovae, such as SN 2007bi, and as one of the dominant types of explosion occurring in the early universe from massive, zero-metallicity Population III stars. The progenitors of such events can be rapidly rotating, therefore exhibiting different evolutionary properties due to the effects of rotationally induced mixing and mass-loss. Proper identification of such events requires rigorous radiation hydrodynamics and radiative transfer calculations that capture not only the behavior of the light curve but also the spectral evolution of these events. We present radiation hydrodynamics and radiation transport calculations for 90-300 M ☉ rotating PISNe covering both the shock breakout and late light curve phases. We also investigate cases of different initial metallicity and rotation rate to determine the impact of these parameters on the detailed spectral characteristics of these events. In agreement with recent results on non-rotating PISNe, we find that for a range of progenitor masses and rotation rates these events have intrinsically red colors in contradiction with observations of superluminous supernovae. The spectroscopic properties of rotating PISNe are similar to those of non-rotating events with stripped hydrogen and helium envelopes. We find that the progenitor metallicity and rotation rate properties are erased after the explosion and cannot be identified in the resulting model spectra. It is the combined effects of pre-supernova mass-loss and the basic properties of the supernova ejecta such as mass, temperature, and velocity that have the most direct impact in the model spectra of PISNe.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Emmanouil Chatzopoulos; J. C. Wheeler; Jozsef Vinko; A. P. Nagy; Brandon Wiggins; Wesley Even
The recent discovery of the unprecedentedly super-luminous transient ASASSN-15lh (or SN 2015L) with its UV-bright secondary peak challenges all the power-input models that have been proposed for super-luminous supernovae. Here we examine some of the few viable interpretations of ASASSN-15lh in the context of a stellar explosion, involving combinations of one or more power inputs. We model the light curve of ASASSN-15lh with a hybrid model that includes contributions from magnetar spin-down energy and hydrogen-poor circumstellar interaction. We also investigate models of pure circumstellar interaction with a massive hydrogen-deficient shell and discuss the lack of interaction features in the observed spectra. We find that, as a supernova, ASASSN-15lh can be best modeled by the energetic core-collapse of an ~40 M ⊙ star interacting with a hydrogen-poor shell of ~20 M ⊙. The circumstellar shell and progenitor mass are consistent with a rapidly rotating pulsational pair-instability supernova progenitor as required for strong interaction following the final supernova explosion. Additional energy injection by a magnetar with an initial period of 1–2 ms and magnetic field of 0.1–1 × 1014 G may supply the excess luminosity required to overcome the deficit in single-component models, but this requires more fine-tuning and extreme parameters for the magnetar, as well as the assumption of efficient conversion of magnetar energy into radiation. We thus favor a single-input model where the reverse shock formed in a strong SN ejecta–circumstellar matter interaction following a very powerful core-collapse SN explosion can supply the luminosity needed to reproduce the late-time UV-bright plateau.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Joseph Smidt; Brandon Wiggins; Jarrett L. Johnson
We present the first ab initio cosmological simulations of a CR7-like object which approximately reproduce the observed line widths and strengths. In our model, CR7 is powered by a massive (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Joseph Smidt; Daniel J. Whalen; Emmanouil Chatzopoulos; Brandon Wiggins; Ke-Jung Chen; Alexandra Kozyreva; Wesley Even
3.23 \times 10^7
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Joseph Smidt; Daniel J. Whalen; Brandon Wiggins; Wesley Even; Jarrett L. Johnson; Chris L. Fryer
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Brandon Wiggins; Victor Migenes; Joseph Smidt
M_\odot
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
A. E. Ruiz-Velasco; D. Felli; Victor Migenes; Brandon Wiggins
) black hole (BH) the accretion rate of which varies between
arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2017
Nicole M. Lloyd-Ronning; Brandon Wiggins; Christopher L. Fryer; Dieter H. Hartmann
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Archive | 2016
Wesley Even; Brandon Wiggins; Ryan T. Wollaeger
0.25 and
Journal of the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts, & Letters | 2016
Brandon Wiggins; Joseph Smidt; Jarrett L. Johnson
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