F. J. D. Serduke
University of California, Berkeley
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2007
Mark M. Phillips; Weidong Li; Joshua A. Frieman; Sergei I. Blinnikov; D. L. DePoy; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Peter A. Milne; Carlos Contreras; Gaston Folatelli; Nidia I. Morrell; Mario Hamuy; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; M. Roth; Sergio Gonzalez; Wojtek Krzeminski; Alexei V. Filippenko; Wendy L. Freedman; Ryan Chornock; Saurabh W. Jha; Barry F. Madore; S. E. Persson; Christopher R. Burns; P. Wyatt; David C. Murphy; Ryan J. Foley; Mohan Ganeshalingam; F. J. D. Serduke; Kevin Krisciunas; Bruce A. Bassett; Andrew Cameron Becker
ABSTRACT We present extensive \documentclass{aastex} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{bm} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{pifont} \usepackage{stmaryrd} \usepackage{textcomp} \usepackage{portland,xspace} \usepackage{amsmath,amsxtra} \usepackage[OT2,OT1]{fontenc} \newcommand\cyr{ \renewcommand\rmdefault{wncyr} \renewcommand\sfdefault{wncyss} \renewcommand\encodingdefault{OT2} \normalfont \selectfont} \DeclareTextFontCommand{\textcyr}{\cyr} \pagestyle{empty} \DeclareMathSizes{10}{9}{7}{6} \begin{document} \landscape
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012
Jeffrey M. Silverman; Ryan J. Foley; Alexei V. Filippenko; Mohan Ganeshalingam; Aaron J. Barth; Ryan Chornock; Christopher V. Griffith; Jason Kong; N. Lee; Douglas C. Leonard; Thomas Matheson; Emily G. Miller; Thea N. Steele; Brian J. Barris; Joshua S. Bloom; Bethany Elisa Cobb; Alison L. Coil; Louis-Benoit Desroches; Elinor L. Gates; Luis C. Ho; Saurabh W. Jha; M. T. Kandrashoff; Weidong Li; Kaisey S. Mandel; Maryam Modjaz; Matthew R. Moore; Robin E. Mostardi; M. Papenkova; S.-J. Park; Daniel A. Perley
u^{\prime }g^{\prime }r^{\prime }i^{\prime }BVRIYJHK_{s}
Nature | 2006
Douglas C. Leonard; Alexei V. Filippenko; Mohan Ganeshalingam; F. J. D. Serduke; Weidong Li; Brandon J. Swift; Avishay Gal-Yam; Ryan J. Foley; Derek B. Fox; S.-J. Park; Jennifer L. Hoffman; Diane S. Wong
\end{document} photometry and optical spectroscopy of the Type Ia supernova (SN) 2005hk. These data reveal that SN 2005hk was nearly identical in its observed properties to SN 2002cx, which has been called “the most peculiar known Type Ia supernova.” Both supernovae exhibited high‐ionization SN 1991T–like premaximum spectra, yet low peak luminosities like that of SN 1991bg. The spectra reveal th...
The Astrophysical Journal | 2009
Xiaofeng Wang; Weidong Li; A. V. Filippenko; Ryan J. Foley; Robert P. Kirshner; M. Modjaz; J. S. Bloom; Peter J. Brown; D. Carter; Andrew S. Friedman; Avishay Gal-Yam; Mohan Ganeshalingam; Malcolm Stuart Hicken; Kevin Krisciunas; Peter A. Milne; Jeffrey M. Silverman; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; W. M. Wood-Vasey; S. B. Cenko; Peter M. Challis; Derek B. Fox; David Kirkman; J. Li; Ti-Pei Li; M. Malkan; M. R. Moore; David B. Reitzel; Robert Michael Rich; F. J. D. Serduke; Ren-Cheng Shang
In this first paper in a series, we present 1298 low-redshift (z ≲ 0.2) optical spectra of 582 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) observed from 1989 to 2008 as part of the Berkeley Supernova Ia Program (BSNIP). 584 spectra of 199 SNe Ia have well-calibrated light curves with measured distance moduli, and many of the spectra have been corrected for host-galaxy contamination. Most of the data were obtained using the Kast double spectrograph mounted on the Shane 3 m telescope at Lick Observatory and have a typical wavelength range of 3300–10 400 A, roughly twice as wide as spectra from most previously published data sets. We present our observing and reduction procedures, and we describe the resulting SN Database, which will be an online, public, searchable data base containing all of our fully reduced spectra and companion photometry. In addition, we discuss our spectral classification scheme (using the SuperNova IDentification code, snid; Blondin & Tonry), utilizing our newly constructed set of snid spectral templates. These templates allow us to accurately classify our entire data set, and by doing so we are able to reclassify a handful of objects as bona fide SNe Ia and a few other objects as members of some of the peculiar SN Ia subtypes. In fact, our data set includes spectra of nearly 90 spectroscopically peculiar SNe Ia. We also present spectroscopic host-galaxy redshifts of some SNe Ia where these values were previously unknown. The sheer size of the BSNIP data set and the consistency of our observation and reduction methods make this sample unique among all other published SN Ia data sets and complementary in many ways to the large, low-redshift SN Ia spectra presented by Matheson et al. and Blondin et al. In other BSNIP papers in this series, we use these data to examine the relationships between spectroscopic characteristics and various observables such as photometric and host-galaxy properties.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
Tamar Faran; Dovi Poznanski; A. V. Filippenko; Ryan Chornock; Ryan J. Foley; Mohan Ganeshalingam; Douglas C. Leonard; Weidong Li; Maryam Modjaz; F. J. D. Serduke; Jeffrey M. Silverman
An important and perhaps critical clue to the mechanism driving the explosion of massive stars as supernovae is provided by the accumulating evidence for asymmetry in the explosion. Indirect evidence comes from high pulsar velocities, associations of supernovae with long-soft γ-ray bursts, and asymmetries in late-time emission-line profiles. Spectropolarimetry provides a direct probe of young supernova geometry, with higher polarization generally indicating a greater departure from spherical symmetry. Large polarizations have been measured for ‘stripped-envelope’ (that is, type Ic; ref. 7) supernovae, which confirms their non-spherical morphology; but the explosions of massive stars with intact hydrogen envelopes (type II-P supernovae) have shown only weak polarizations at the early times observed. Here we report multi-epoch spectropolarimetry of a classic type II-P supernova that reveals the abrupt appearance of significant polarization when the inner core is first exposed in the thinning ejecta (∼90 days after explosion). We infer a departure from spherical symmetry of at least 30 per cent for the inner ejecta. Combined with earlier results, this suggests that a strongly non-spherical explosion may be a generic feature of core-collapse supernovae of all types, where the asphericity in type II-P supernovae is cloaked at early times by the massive, opaque, hydrogen envelope.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2007
Jerod T. Parrent; David Branch; M. A. Troxel; Darrin Alan Casebeer; David J. Jeffery; Wesley Ketchum; E. Baron; F. J. D. Serduke; Alexei V. Filippenko
We present extensive photometry at ultraviolet (UV), optical, and near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths, as well as dense sampling of optical spectra, for the normal Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2005cf. The optical photometry, performed at eight different telescopes, shows a 1σ scatter of ≾0.03 mag after proper corrections for the instrument responses. From the well-sampled light curves, we find that SN 2005cf reached a B-band maximum at 13.63 ± 0.02 mag, with an observed luminosity decline rate Δm _(15)(B) = 1.05 ± 0.03 mag. The correlations between the decline rate and various color indexes, recalibrated on the basis of an expanded SN Ia sample, yield a consistent estimate for the host-galaxy reddening of SN 2005cf, E(B – V)_(host) = 0.10 ± 0.03 mag. The UV photometry was obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope, and the results match each other to within 0.1-0.2 mag. The UV light curves show similar evolution to the broadband U, with an exception in the 2000-2500 A spectral range (corresponding to the F220W/uvm2 filters), where the light curve appears broader and much fainter than that on either side (likely owing to the intrinsic spectral evolution). Combining the UV data with the ground-based optical and NIR data, we establish the generic UV-optical-NIR bolometric light curve for SN 2005cf and derive the bolometric corrections in the absence of UV and/or NIR data. The overall spectral evolution of SN 2005cf is similar to that of a normal SN Ia, but with variety in the strength and profile of the main feature lines. The spectra at early times displayed strong, high-velocity (HV) features in the Ca II H&K doublet and NIR triplet, which were distinctly detached from the photosphere (v ≈ 10,000 km s^(–1)) at a velocity ranging from 20,000 to 25,000 km s^(–1). One interesting feature is the flat-bottomed absorption observed near 6000 A in the earliest spectrum, which rapidly evolved into a triangular shape and then became a normal Si II λ6355 absorption profile at about one week before maximum brightness. This premaximum spectral evolution is perhaps due to the blending of the Si IIλ6355 at photospheric velocity and another HV absorption component (e.g., an Si II shell at a velocity ~18,000 km s^(–1)) in the outer ejecta, and may be common in other normal SNe Ia. The possible origin of the HV absorption features is briefly discussed.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
Isaac Shivvers; Alexei V. Filippenko; Jeffrey M. Silverman; W. Zheng; Ryan J. Foley; Ryan Chornock; Aaron J. Barth; S. Bradley Cenko; Kelsey I. Clubb; Ori D. Fox; Mohan Ganeshalingam; Melissa L. Graham; Patrick L. Kelly; I. K. W. Kleiser; Douglas C. Leonard; Weidong Li; Thomas Matheson; Jon C. Mauerhan; Maryam Modjaz; F. J. D. Serduke; Joseph C. Shields; Thea N. Steele; Brandon J. Swift; Diane S. Wong; Heechan Yuk
What are Type II-Linear supernovae (SNe II-L)? This class, which has been ill defined for decades, now receives significant attention -- both theoretically, in order to understand what happens to stars in the ~15-25Mo range, and observationally, with two independent studies suggesting that they cannot be cleanly separated photometrically from the regular hydrogen-rich SNe II-P characterised by a marked plateau in their light curve. Here, we analyze the multi-band light curves and extensive spectroscopic coverage of a sample of 35 SNe II and find that 11 of them could be SNe II-L. The spectra of these SNe are hydrogen deficient, typically have shallow Halpha absorption, may show indirect signs of helium via strong OI 7774 absorption, and have faster line velocities consistent with a thin hydrogen shell. The light curves can be mostly differentiated from those of the regular, hydrogen-rich SNe II-P by their steeper decline rates and higher luminosity, and we propose as a defining photometric characteristic the decline in the V band: SNe II-L seem to decline by more than 0.5 mag from peak brightness by day 50 after explosion. Using our sample we provide template light curves for SNe II-L and II-P in 4 photometric bands.
Archive | 2010
Satoshi Nakano; Kenichi Kadota; Jeffrey M. Silverman; J.-Y. Choi; Alexei V. Filippenko; F. J. D. Serduke
Synthetic spectra generated with the parameterized supernova synthetic spectrum code SYNOW are compared to spectra of the unusual Type Ib supernova 2005bf. We confirm the discovery by Folatelli et al. that very early spectra (~30 days before maximum light) contain both photospheric-velocity (~8000 km s–1) features of He i, Ca ii, and Fe ii, and detached high-velocity (~14,000 km s–1) features of Hα, Ca ii, and Fe ii. An early spectrum of SN 2005bf is an almost perfect match to a near-maximum-light spectrum of the Type Ib SN 1999ex. Although these two spectra were at very different times with respect to maximum light (20 days before maximum for SN 2005bf and 5 days after for SN 1999ex), they were for similar times after explosion—about 20 days for SN 2005bf and 24 days for SN 1999ex. The almost perfect match clinches the previously suggested identification of Hα in SN 1999ex and supports the proposition that many if not all Type Ib supernovae eject a small amount of hydrogen. The earliest available spectrum of SN 2005bf resembles a near-maximum-light spectrum of the Type Ic SN 1994I. These two spectra were also at different times with respect to maximum light (32 days before maximum for SN 2005bf and 4 days before for SN 1994I) but at similar times after explosion—about 8 days for SN 2005bf and 10 days for SN 1994I. The resemblance motivates us to consider a reinterpretation of the spectra of Type Ic supernovae, involving coexisting photospheric-velocity and high-velocity features. The implications of our results for the geometry of the SN 2005bf ejecta, which has been suggested as being grossly asymmetric, are briefly discussed.
Archive | 2008
Jeffrey M. Silverman; F. J. D. Serduke; Xin Peng Wang; Alexei V. Filippenko
We present the complete sample of stripped-envelope supernova (SN) spectra observed by the Lick Observatory Supernova Search (LOSS) collaboration over the last three decades: 888 spectra of 302 SNe, 652 published here for the first time, with 384 spectra (of 92 SNe) having photometrically determined phases. After correcting for redshift and Milky Way dust reddening and reevaluating the spectroscopic classifications for each SN, we construct mean spectra of the three major spectral subtypes (Types IIb, Ib, and Ic) binned by phase. We compare measures of line strengths and widths made from this sample to the results of previous efforts, confirming that O I λ7774 absorption is stronger and found at higher velocity in Type Ic SNe than in Types Ib or IIb SNe in the first ∼30 days after peak brightness, though the widths of nebular emission lines are consistent across subtypes. We also highlight newly available observations for a few rare subpopulations of interest.
Archive | 2007
Jeffrey M. Silverman; Mohan Ganeshalingam; F. J. D. Serduke; Alexei V. Filippenko