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Featured researches published by Federica B. Bianco.


Nature | 2011

Supernova SN 2011fe from an exploding carbon–oxygen white dwarf star

Peter E. Nugent; Mark Sullivan; S. Bradley Cenko; R. C. Thomas; Daniel Kasen; D. Andrew Howell; D. F. Bersier; Joshua S. Bloom; S. R. Kulkarni; M. T. Kandrashoff; Alexei V. Filippenko; Jeffrey M. Silverman; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Andrew W. Howard; Howard Isaacson; K. Maguire; Nao Suzuki; James E. Tarlton; Yen Chen Pan; Lars Bildsten; Benjamin J. Fulton; Jerod T. Parrent; David J. Sand; Philipp Podsiadlowski; Federica B. Bianco; Benjamin E. P. Dilday; Melissa Lynn Graham; J. D. Lyman; P. A. James; Mansi M. Kasliwal

Type Ia supernovae have been used empirically as ‘standard candles’ to demonstrate the acceleration of the expansion of the Universe even though fundamental details, such as the nature of their progenitor systems and how the stars explode, remain a mystery. There is consensus that a white dwarf star explodes after accreting matter in a binary system, but the secondary body could be anything from a main-sequence star to a red giant, or even another white dwarf. This uncertainty stems from the fact that no recent type Ia supernova has been discovered close enough to Earth to detect the stars before explosion. Here we report early observations of supernova SN 2011fe in the galaxy M101 at a distance from Earth of 6.4 megaparsecs. We find that the exploding star was probably a carbon–oxygen white dwarf, and from the lack of an early shock we conclude that the companion was probably a main-sequence star. Early spectroscopy shows high-velocity oxygen that slows rapidly, on a timescale of hours, and extensive mixing of newly synthesized intermediate-mass elements in the outermost layers of the supernova. A companion paper uses pre-explosion images to rule out luminous red giants and most helium stars as companions to the progenitor.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

A PANCHROMATIC VIEW OF THE RESTLESS SN 2009ip REVEALS THE EXPLOSIVE EJECTION OF A MASSIVE STAR ENVELOPE

R. Margutti; D. Milisavljevic; Alicia M. Soderberg; Ryan Chornock; B. A. Zauderer; Kohta Murase; C. Guidorzi; Nathan Edward Sanders; Paul Kuin; Claes Fransson; Emily M. Levesque; P. Chandra; Edo Berger; Federica B. Bianco; Peter J. Brown; P. Challis; Emmanouil Chatzopoulos; C. C. Cheung; Changsu Choi; Laura Chomiuk; N. N. Chugai; Carlos Contreras; Maria Rebecca Drout; Robert A. Fesen; Ryan J. Foley; William. Fong; Andrew S. Friedman; Christa Gall; N. Gehrels; J. Hjorth

The double explosion of SN 2009ip in 2012 raises questions about our understanding of the late stages of massive star evolution. Here we present a comprehensive study of SN 2009ip during its remarkable rebrightenings. High-cadence photometric and spectroscopic observations from the GeV to the radio band obtained from a variety of ground-based and space facilities (including the Very Large Array, Swift, Fermi, Hubble Space Telescope, and XMM) constrain SN 2009ip to be a low energy (E similar to 1050 erg for an ejecta mass similar to 0.5 M-circle dot) and asymmetric explosion in a complex medium shaped by multiple eruptions of the restless progenitor star. Most of the energy is radiated as a result of the shock breaking out through a dense shell of material located at similar to 5 x 10(14) cm with M similar to 0.1 M-circle dot, ejected by the precursor outburst similar to 40 days before the major explosion. We interpret the NIR excess of emission as signature of material located further out, the origin of which has to be connected with documented mass-loss episodes in the previous years. Our modeling predicts bright neutrino emission associated with the shock break-out if the cosmic-ray energy is comparable to the radiated energy. We connect this phenomenology with the explosive ejection of the outer layers of the massive progenitor star, which later interacted with material deposited in the surroundings by previous eruptions. Future observations will reveal if the massive luminous progenitor star survived. Irrespective of whether the explosion was terminal, SN 2009ip brought to light the existence of new channels for sustained episodic mass loss, the physical origin of which has yet to be identified.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Hubble Space Telescope studies of low-redshift type Ia supernovae: evolution with redshift and ultraviolet spectral trends

K. Maguire; Richard S. Ellis; Peter E. Nugent; D. A. Howell; Avishay Gal-Yam; Jeff Cooke; Paolo A. Mazzali; Y.-C. Pan; Benjamin E. P. Dilday; R. C. Thomas; Iair Arcavi; Sagi Ben-Ami; D. F. Bersier; Federica B. Bianco; Benjamin J. Fulton; I. M. Hook; Assaf Horesh; E. Y. Hsiao; P. A. James; Philipp Podsiadlowski; Emma S. Walker; Ofer Yaron; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Russ R. Laher; Nicholas M. Law; Eran O. Ofek; Dovi Poznanski; Jason A. Surace

We present an analysis of the maximum light, near-ultraviolet (NUV; 2900 < λ < 5500 A) spectra of 32 low-redshift (0.001 < z < 0.08) Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph. We combine this spectroscopic sample with high-quality gri light curves obtained with robotic telescopes to measure SN Ia photometric parameters, such as stretch (light-curve width), optical colour and brightness (Hubble residual). By comparing our new data to a comparable sample of SNe Ia at intermediate redshift (0.4 < z < 0.9), we detect modest spectral evolution (3σ), in the sense that our mean low-redshift NUV spectrum has a depressed flux compared to its intermediate-redshift counterpart. We also see a strongly increased dispersion about the mean with decreasing wavelength, confirming the results of earlier surveys. We show that these trends are consistent with changes in metallicity as predicted by contemporary SN Ia spectral models. We also examine the properties of various NUV spectral diagnostics in the individual SN spectra. We find a general correlation between SN stretch and the velocity (or position) of many NUV spectral features. In particular, we observe that higher stretch SNe have larger Ca ii H&K velocities, which also correlate with host galaxy stellar mass. This latter trend is probably driven by the well-established correlation between stretch and host galaxy stellar mass. We find no significant trends between UV spectral features and optical colour. Mean spectra constructed according to whether the SN has a positive or negative Hubble residual show very little difference at NUV wavelengths, indicating that the NUV evolution and variation we identify does not directly correlate with Hubble diagram residuals. Our work confirms and strengthens earlier conclusions regarding the complex behaviour of SNe Ia in the NUV spectral region, but suggests the correlations we find are more useful in constraining progenitor models rather than improving the use of SNe Ia as cosmological probes.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

OPTICAL SPECTRA OF 73 STRIPPED-ENVELOPE CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE

Maryam Modjaz; Stephane Blondin; Robert P. Kirshner; Thomas Matheson; Perry L. Berlind; Federica B. Bianco; M. Calkins; Peter M. Challis; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Malcolm Stuart Hicken; Saurabh W. Jha; Y. Q. Liu; G. H. Marion

We present 645 optical spectra of 73 supernovae (SNe) of Types IIb, Ib, Ic, and broad-lined Ic. All of these types are attributed to the core collapse of massive stars, with varying degrees of intact H and He envelopes before explosion. The SNe in our sample have a mean redshift \textless cz \textgreater = 4200 km s(-1). Most of these spectra were gathered at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) between 2004 and 2009. For 53 SNe, these are the first published spectra. The data coverage ranges from mere identification (1-3 spectra) for a few SNe to extensive series of observations (10-30 spectra) that trace the spectral evolution for others, with an average of 9 spectra per SN. For 44 SNe of the 73 SNe presented here, we have well-determined dates of maximum light to determine the phase of each spectrum. Our sample constitutes the most extensive spectral library of stripped-envelope SNe to date. We provide very early coverage (as early as 30 days before V-band max) for photospheric spectra, as well as late-time nebular coverage when the innermost regions of the SN are visible (as late as 2 yr after explosion, while for SN 1993J, we have data as late as 11.6 yr). This data set has homogeneous observations and reductions that allow us to study the spectroscopic diversity of these classes of stripped SNe and to compare these to SNe-gamma-ray bursts. We undertake these matters in follow-up papers.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

CONSTRAINING TYPE Ia SUPERNOVAE PROGENITORS FROM THREE YEARS OF SUPERNOVA LEGACY SURVEY DATA

Federica B. Bianco; D. A. Howell; A. Conley; D. Kasen; S. Gonzalez-Gaitan; J. Guy; P. Astier; C. Balland; R. G. Carlberg; D. Fouchez; N. Fourmanoit; D. Hardin; I. M. Hook; C. Lidman; R. Pain; Nathalie Palanque-Delabrouille; S. Perlmutter; K. Perrett; C. J. Pritchet; Nicolas Regnault; J. Rich; V. Ruhlmann-Kleider

While it is generally accepted that Type Ia supernovae are the result of the explosion of a carbon-oxygen white dwarf accreting mass in a binary system, the details of their genesis still elude us, and the nature of the binary companion is uncertain. Kasen points out that the presence of a non-degenerate companion in the progenitor system could leave an observable trace: a flux excess in the early rise portion of the light curve caused by the ejecta impact with the companion itself. This excess would be observable only under favorable viewing angles, and its intensity depends on the nature of the companion. We searched for the signature of a non-degenerate companion in three years of Supernova Legacy Survey data by generating synthetic light curves accounting for the effects of shocking and comparing true and synthetic time series with Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests. Our most constraining result comes from noting that the shocking effect is more prominent in the rest-frame B than V band: we rule out a contribution from white dwarf-red giant binary systems to Type Ia supernova explosions greater than 10% at the 2{sigma}, and greater than 20% at the 3{sigma} level.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE SPECTRAL SN-GRB CONNECTION: SYSTEMATIC SPECTRAL COMPARISONS BETWEEN TYPE Ic SUPERNOVAE AND BROAD-LINED TYPE Ic SUPERNOVAE WITH AND WITHOUT GAMMA-RAY BURSTS

Maryam Modjaz; Yuqian Q. Liu; Federica B. Bianco; Or Graur

We present the first systematic investigation of spectral properties of 17 Type Ic Supernovae (SNe Ic), 10 broad-lined SNe Ic (SNe Ic-bl) without observed Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) and 11 SNe Ic-bl with GRBs (SN-GRBs) as a function of time in order to probe their explosion conditions and progenitors. We analyze a total of 407 spectra, which were drawn from published spectra of individual SNe as well as from the densely time-sampled spectra data of Modjaz et al. (2014). In order to quantify the diversity of the SN spectra as a function of SN subtype, we construct average spectra of SNe Ic, SNe Ic-bl without GRBs and SNe Ic-bl with GRBs. We find that SN 1994I is not a typical SN Ic, in contrast to common belief, while the spectra of SN 1998bw/GRB 980425 are representative of mean spectra of SNe Ic-bl. We measure the ejecta absorption and width velocities using a new method described here and find that SNe Ic-bl with GRBs, on average, have quantifiably higher absorption velocities, as well as broader line widths than SNe without observed GRBs. In addition, we search for correlations between SN-GRB spectral properties and the energies of their accompanying GRBs. Finally, we show that the absence of clear He lines in optical spectra of SNe Ic-bl, and in particular of SN-GRBs, is not due to them being too smeared out due to the high velocities present in the ejecta. This implies that the progenitor stars of SN-GRBs are probably He-free, in addition to being H-free, which puts strong constraints on the stellar evolutionary paths needed to produce such SN-GRB progenitors at the observed low metallicities.


Nature | 2012

Light echoes reveal an unexpectedly cool [eegr][thinsp]Carinae during its nineteenth-century Great Eruption

Armin Rest; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Nolan R. Walborn; Nathan Smith; Federica B. Bianco; Ryan Chornock; Douglas L. Welch; D. A. Howell; M. E. Huber; Ryan J. Foley; W. Fong; B. Sinnott; Howard E. Bond; R. C. Smith; I. Toledo; D. Minniti; Kaisey S. Mandel

η Carinae is one of the most massive binary stars in the Milky Way. It became the second-brightest star in our sky during its mid-nineteenth-century ‘Great Eruption’, but then faded from view (with only naked-eye estimates of brightness). Its eruption is unique in that it exceeded the Eddington luminosity limit for ten years. Because it is only 2.3 kiloparsecs away, spatially resolved studies of the nebula have constrained the ejected mass and velocity, indicating that during its nineteenth-century eruption, η Car ejected more than ten solar masses in an event that released ten per cent of the energy of a typical core-collapse supernova, without destroying the star. Here we report observations of light echoes of η Carinae from the 1838–1858 Great Eruption. Spectra of these light echoes show only absorption lines, which are blueshifted by −210 km s−1, in good agreement with predicted expansion speeds. The light-echo spectra correlate best with those of G2-to-G5 supergiants, which have effective temperatures of around 5,000 kelvin. In contrast to the class of extragalactic outbursts assumed to be analogues of the Great Eruption of η Carinae, the effective temperature of its outburst is significantly lower than that allowed by standard opaque wind models. This indicates that other physical mechanisms such as an energetic blast wave may have triggered and influenced the eruption.


Nature | 2011

Light echoes reveal an unexpectedly cool Eta Carinae during its 19th-century Great Eruption

Kaisey S. Mandel; B. Sinnott; Howard E. Bond; Douglas L. Welch; D. A. Howell; R. C. Smith; A. Rest; W. Fong; I. Toledo; Jose Luis Palacio Prieto; Ryan Chornock; Federica B. Bianco; Nolan R. Walborn; Nathan Smith; Ryan J. Foley; D. Minniti; M. Huber

η Carinae is one of the most massive binary stars in the Milky Way. It became the second-brightest star in our sky during its mid-nineteenth-century ‘Great Eruption’, but then faded from view (with only naked-eye estimates of brightness). Its eruption is unique in that it exceeded the Eddington luminosity limit for ten years. Because it is only 2.3 kiloparsecs away, spatially resolved studies of the nebula have constrained the ejected mass and velocity, indicating that during its nineteenth-century eruption, η Car ejected more than ten solar masses in an event that released ten per cent of the energy of a typical core-collapse supernova, without destroying the star. Here we report observations of light echoes of η Carinae from the 1838–1858 Great Eruption. Spectra of these light echoes show only absorption lines, which are blueshifted by −210 km s−1, in good agreement with predicted expansion speeds. The light-echo spectra correlate best with those of G2-to-G5 supergiants, which have effective temperatures of around 5,000 kelvin. In contrast to the class of extragalactic outbursts assumed to be analogues of the Great Eruption of η Carinae, the effective temperature of its outburst is significantly lower than that allowed by standard opaque wind models. This indicates that other physical mechanisms such as an energetic blast wave may have triggered and influenced the eruption.


Nature | 2016

Repetitive patterns in rapid optical variations in the nearby black-hole binary V404 Cygni.

Mariko Kimura; Keisuke Isogai; Taichi Kato; Yoshihiro Ueda; Satoshi Nakahira; Megumi Shidatsu; Teruaki Enoto; Takafumi Hori; Daisaku Nogami; Colin Littlefield; Ryoko Ishioka; Ying-Tung Chen; S.-K. King; Chih Yi Wen; Shiang-Yu Wang; M. J. Lehner; Megan E. Schwamb; Jen Hung Wang; Z.-W. Zhang; Charles Alcock; Tim Axelrod; Federica B. Bianco; Yong Ik Byun; W. P. Chen; Kem H. Cook; Dae-Won Kim; Typhoon Lee; S. L. Marshall; Elena P. Pavlenko; Oksana I. Antonyuk

How black holes accrete surrounding matter is a fundamental yet unsolved question in astrophysics. It is generally believed that matter is absorbed into black holes via accretion disks, the state of which depends primarily on the mass-accretion rate. When this rate approaches the critical rate (the Eddington limit), thermal instability is supposed to occur in the inner disk, causing repetitive patterns of large-amplitude X-ray variability (oscillations) on timescales of minutes to hours. In fact, such oscillations have been observed only in sources with a high mass-accretion rate, such as GRS 1915+105 (refs 2, 3). These large-amplitude, relatively slow timescale, phenomena are thought to have physical origins distinct from those of X-ray or optical variations with small amplitudes and fast timescales (less than about 10 seconds) often observed in other black-hole binaries—for example, XTE J1118+480 (ref. 4) and GX 339−4 (ref. 5). Here we report an extensive multi-colour optical photometric data set of V404 Cygni, an X-ray transient source containing a black hole of nine solar masses (and a companion star) at a distance of 2.4 kiloparsecs (ref. 8). Our data show that optical oscillations on timescales of 100 seconds to 2.5 hours can occur at mass-accretion rates more than ten times lower than previously thought. This suggests that the accretion rate is not the critical parameter for inducing inner-disk instabilities. Instead, we propose that a long orbital period is a key condition for these large-amplitude oscillations, because the outer part of the large disk in binaries with long orbital periods will have surface densities too low to maintain sustained mass accretion to the inner part of the disk. The lack of sustained accretion—not the actual rate—would then be the critical factor causing large-amplitude oscillations in long-period systems.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

ANALYZING the LARGEST SPECTROSCOPIC DATA SET of STRIPPED SUPERNOVAE to IMPROVE THEIR IDENTIFICATIONS and CONSTRAIN THEIR PROGENITORS

Yu Qian Liu; Maryam Modjaz; Federica B. Bianco; Or Graur

Using the largest spectroscopic dataset of stripped-envelope core-collapse supernovae (stripped SNe), we present a systematic investigation of spectral properties of Type IIb SNe (SNe IIb), Type Ib SNe (SNe Ib), and Type Ic SNe (SNe Ic). Prior studies have been based on individual objects or small samples. Here, we analyze 227 spectra of 14 SNe IIb, 258 spectra of 21 SNe Ib, and 207 spectra of 17 SNe Ic based on the stripped SN dataset of Modjaz et al. (2014) and other published spectra of individual SNe. Each SN in our sample has a secure spectroscopic ID, a date of

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Megan E. Schwamb

University of Pennsylvania

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John A. Rice

University of California

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W. P. Chen

National Central University

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