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Dive into the research topics where Carlton R. Pennypacker is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlton R. Pennypacker.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

Measurements of Omega and Lambda from 42 high redshift supernovae

S. Perlmutter; G. Aldering; G. Goldhaber; Robert Andrew Knop; Peter E. Nugent; P. G. Castro; S. E. Deustua; S. Fabbro; Ariel Goobar; Donald E. Groom; I. M. Hook; A. G. Kim; M. Y. Kim; Julia C. Lee; N. J. Nunes; R. Pain; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Robert Michael Quimby; C. Lidman; Richard S. Ellis; M. J. Irwin; Richard G. McMahon; Pilar Ruiz-Lapuente; Nancy A. Walton; Bradley E. Schaefer; B. J. Boyle; A. V. Filippenko; Thomas Matheson; Andrew S. Fruchter; Nino Panagia

We report measurements of the mass density, Omega_M, and cosmological-constant energy density, Omega_Lambda, of the universe based on the analysis of 42 Type Ia supernovae discovered by the Supernova Cosmology Project. The magnitude-redshift data for these SNe, at redshifts between 0.18 and 0.83, are fit jointly with a set of SNe from the Calan/Tololo Supernova Survey, at redshifts below 0.1, to yield values for the cosmological parameters. All SN peak magnitudes are standardized using a SN Ia lightcurve width-luminosity relation. The measurement yields a joint probability distribution of the cosmological parameters that is approximated by the relation 0.8 Omega_M - 0.6 Omega_Lambda ~= -0.2 +/- 0.1 in the region of interest (Omega_M 0) = 99%, including the identified systematic uncertainties. The best-fit age of the universe relative to the Hubble time is t_0 = 14.9{+1.4,-1.1} (0.63/h) Gyr for a flat cosmology. The size of our sample allows us to perform a variety of statistical tests to check for possible systematic errors and biases. We find no significant differences in either the host reddening distribution or Malmquist bias between the low-redshift Calan/Tololo sample and our high-redshift sample. The conclusions are robust whether or not a width-luminosity relation is used to standardize the SN peak magnitudes.


Nature | 1998

Discovery of a supernova explosion at half the age of the universe

S. Perlmutter; G. Aldering; M. Della Valle; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; Richard S. Ellis; Sebastien Fabbro; Andrew S. Fruchter; G. Goldhaber; Donald E. Groom; I. M. Hook; A. G. Kim; M. Y. Kim; Robert Andrew Knop; C. Lidman; Richard G. McMahon; Peter Edward Nugent; R. Pain; N. Panagia; Carlton R. Pennypacker; P. Ruiz-Lapuente; Bradley E. Schaefer; Nancy A. Walton

The ultimate fate of the Universe, infinite expansion or a big crunch, can be determined by using the redshifts and distances of very distant supernovae to monitor changes in the expansion rate. We can now find large numbers of these distant supernovae, and measure their redshifts and apparent brightnesses; moreover, recent studies of nearby type Ia supernovae have shown how to determine their intrinsic luminosities—and therefore with their apparent brightnesses obtain their distances. The >50 distant supernovae discovered so far provide a record of changes in the expansion rate over the past several billion years. However, it is necessary to extend this expansion history still farther away (hence further back in time) in order to begin to distinguish the causes of the expansion-rate changes—such as the slowing caused by the gravitational attraction of the Universes mass density, and the possibly counteracting effect of the cosmological constant. Here we report the most distant spectroscopically confirmed supernova. Spectra and photometry from the largest telescopes on the ground and in space show that this ancient supernova is strikingly similar to nearby, recent type Ia supernovae. When combined with previous measurements of nearer supernovae,, these new measurements suggest that we may live in a low-mass-density universe.


Archive | 1997

Measurements of the cosmological parameters omega and lambda from the first seven supernovae at z greater than or equal to 0.35

Saul Perlmutter; Silvia Gabi; G. Goldhaber; Ariel Goobar; Donald E. Groom; Isobel M. Hook; Alex G. Kim; Min Kook Kim; Janice C. Lee; R. Pain; Carlton R. Pennypacker; I. A. Small; Richard S. Ellis; Richard G. McMahon; B. J. Boyle; P. S. Bunclark; David Carter; M. J. Irwin; Karl Glazebrook; Heidi Jo Newberg; Alexei V. Filippenko; Thomas Matheson; Michael A. Dopita; Warrick J. Couch

We have developed a technique to systematically discover and study high-redshift supernovae that can be used to measure the cosmological parameters. We report here results based on the initial seven of more than 28 supernovae discovered to date in the high-redshift supernova search of the Supernova Cosmology Project. We find an observational dispersion in peak magnitudes of ? -->MB=0.27; this dispersion narrows to ?MB, corr=0.19 after correcting the magnitudes using the light-curve width-luminosity relation found for nearby (z ? 0.1) Type Ia supernovae from the Cal?n/Tololo survey (Hamuy et al.). Comparing light-curve width-corrected magnitudes as a function of redshift of our distant (z = 0.35-0.46) supernovae to those of nearby Type Ia supernovae yields a global measurement of the mass density, ?M


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Timescale stretch parameterization of Type Ia supernova B-band light curves

G. Goldhaber; Donald E. Groom; Alex G. Kim; G. Aldering; P. Astier; A. Conley; S. E. Deustua; Richard S. Ellis; S. Fabbro; Andrew S. Fruchter; Ariel Goobar; I. Hook; M. J. Irwin; M. Y. Kim; Robert Andrew Knop; C. Lidman; Richard McMahon; Peter E. Nugent; R. Pain; Nino Panagia; Carlton R. Pennypacker; S. Perlmutter; Pilar Ruiz-Lapuente; Bradley E. Schaefer; Nancy A. Walton; T. York

{r M}


The Astrophysical Journal | 1981

A Measurement of the Cosmic-Ray Antiproton Flux and a Search for Antihelium

Andrew Buffington; Stephen M. Schindler; Carlton R. Pennypacker

-->=0.88 -->+ 0.69?0.60 for a ? = 0 cosmology. For a spatially flat universe (i.e., ?M + ?? = 1), we find ?M


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2009

The PLATO Dome A Site-Testing Observatory : instrumentation and first results

Huigen Yang; Graham S. Allen; Michael C. B. Ashley; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; Jon Lawrence; Y. Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Mark J. McCaughrean; Anna M. Moore; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Lingzhi Wang; Jun Yan

{r M}


The Astrophysical Journal | 1987

Optical color, polarimetric, and timing measurements of the 50 MS Large Magellanic Cloud pulsar, PSR 0540-69

J. Middleditch; Carlton R. Pennypacker; M. S. Burns

-->=0.94 -->+ 0.34?0.28 or, equivalently, a measurement of the cosmological constant, ??=0.06 -->+ 0.28?0.34 ( < 0.51 at the 95% confidence level). For the more general Friedmann-Lema?tre cosmologies with independent ?M and ??, the results are presented as a confidence region on the ?M-?? plane. This region does not correspond to a unique value of the deceleration parameter q0. We present analyses and checks for statistical and systematic errors and also show that our results do not depend on the specifics of the width-luminosity correction. The results for ??-versus-?M are inconsistent with ?-dominated, low-density, flat cosmologies that have been proposed to reconcile the ages of globular cluster stars with higher Hubble constant values.


The Astronomical Journal | 1993

Photometric and Spectroscopic Observations of SN 1990E in NGC 1035: Observational Constraints for Models of Type II Supernovae

Brian Paul Schmidt; Robert P. Kirshner; Rudolph E. Schild; Bruno Leibundgut; David Jeffery; S. P. Willner; Reynier F. Peletier; Ann I. Zabludoff; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Mario Hamuy; Lisa A. Wells; Chris Smith; J. A. Baldwin; W. Weller; M. Navarette; L. E. Gonzalez; Alexei V. Filippenko; Joseph C. Shields; Charles C. Steidel; S. Perlmutter; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Craig K. Smith; Alain C. Porter; Todd A. Boroson; Raylee A. Stathakis; Russell Cannon; J. Peters; E. Horine; Kenneth C. Freeman

R-band intensity measurements along the light curve of Type Ia supernovae discovered by the Cosmology Project (SCP) are fitted in brightness to templates allowing a free parameter the time-axis width factor w identically equal to s times (1+z). The data points are then individually aligned in the time-axis, normalized and K-corrected back to the rest frame, after which the nearly 1300 normalized intensity measurements are found to lie on a well-determined common rest-frame B-band curve which we call the composite curve. The same procedure is applied to 18 low-redshift Calan/Tololo SNe with Z < 0.11; these nearly 300 B-band photometry points are found to lie on the composite curve equally well. The SCP search technique produces several measurements before maximum light for each supernova. We demonstrate that the linear stretch factor, s, which parameterizes the light-curve timescale appears independent of z, and applies equally well to the declining and rising parts of the light curve. In fact, the B band template that best fits this composite curve fits the individual supernova photometry data when stretched by a factor s with chi 2/DoF ~;~; 1, thus as well as any parameterization can, given the current data sets. The measurement of the data of explosion, however, is model dependent and not tightly constrained by the current data. We also demonstrate the 1 + z light-cure time-axis broadening expected from cosmological expansion. This argues strongly against alternative explanations, such as tired light, for the redshift of distant objects.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

The PLATO Antarctic site testing observatory

Jon Lawrence; G. R. Allen; Michael C. B. Ashley; Colin S. Bonner; Stuart Bradley; Xiangqun Cui; Jon R. Everett; Long-Long Feng; Xuefei Gong; Shane Hengst; J.-Y. Hu; Zhaoji Jiang; Craig Kulesa; Y. Li; D. M. Luong-Van; Anna M. Moore; Carlton R. Pennypacker; Weijia Qin; Reed Riddle; Zhaohui Shang; John W. V. Storey; Bo Sun; N. Suntzeff; N. F. H. Tothill; Tony Travouillon; Christopher K. Walker; Lifan Wang; Jun Yan; Ji Yang; Huigen Yang

A balloon-borne instrument has measured the cosmic-ray antiproton flux between 130 and 320 MeV and searched for antihelium between 130 and 370 MeV per nuclear. These particles were selected from the background of normal-matter cosmic rays by combining a selective trigger with a detailed spark chamber visualization of each recorded event. Antiprotons are identified by their characteristic annihilation radiation. Residue from background processes meeting the selection criteria is small. The observed 14 antiprotons yield a measured differential flux of 1.7±0.5X 10^(-4) antiprotons m^(-2) sr(-1) s^(-1)i Mev^(-1) at the top of the atmosphere. The corresponding antiproton/pro-ton ratio is 2.2±0.6X10^(-4), only slightly smaller than the ratio observed by other experiments at higher energies. Thus the antiprotons have a spectral shape similar to the protons, at least down to about 100 MeV. The expected flux of these particles can be calculated under the assumption that they were created by collisions of high-energy cosmic rays with the interstellar gas. Calculations using the standard leaky box model for propagation in the Galaxy predict a flux two orders of magnitude smaller than that observed. A small low-energy flux is predicted due to a kinematic suppression of the production of low-energy antiprotons. The discrepancy between calculations and experiment may be evidence that cosmic-ray protons have passed through substantially more than 5 g cm^(-2) of material during their lifetime. In addition, the combined results from this experiment and previous ones may be evidence for stochastic, energy-changing processes in interstellar space which act upon the secondary antiprotons after their creation. The search for cosmic-ray antihelium sets a 95% confidence level upper limit on the He /He ratio of 2.2 X 10^(-5).


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

High Time Resolution Infrared Observations of the Crab Nebula Pulsar and the Pulsar Emission Mechanism

Stephen S. Eikenberry; G. G. Fazio; Scott M. Ransom; John Middleditch; Jerome Kristian; Carlton R. Pennypacker

The PLATeau Observatory (PLATO) is an automated self-powered astrophysical observatory that was deployed to Dome A, the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, in 2008 January. PLATO consists of a suite of site-testing instruments designed to quantify the benefits of the Dome A site for astronomy, and science instruments designed to take advantage of the unique observing conditions. Instruments include CSTAR, an array of optical telescopes for transient astronomy; Gattini, an instrument to measure the optical sky brightness and cloud cover statistics; DASLE, an experiment to measure the statistics of the meteorological conditions within the near-surface layer; Pre-HEAT, a submillimeter tipping radiometer measuring the atmospheric transmission and water vapor content and performing spectral line imaging of the Galactic plane; and Snodar, an acoustic radar designed to measure turbulence within the near-surface layer. PLATO has run completely unattended and collected data throughout the winter 2008 season. Here we present a detailed description of the PLATO instrument suite and preliminary results obtained from the first season of operation.

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Alex G. Kim

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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G. Goldhaber

University of California

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Susana Elizabeth Deustua

Space Telescope Science Institute

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M. J. Irwin

University of Cambridge

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Donald E. Groom

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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S. Perlmutter

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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B. J. Boyle

Australia Telescope National Facility

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