Jose Manuel Campillos Maza
University of Chile
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Featured researches published by Jose Manuel Campillos Maza.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1998
Brian Paul Schmidt; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; M. M. Phillips; Robert A. Schommer; Alejandro Clocchiatti; Robert P. Kirshner; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Peter M. Challis; Bruno Leibundgut; Jason Spyromilio; Adam G. Riess; Alexei V. Filippenko; Mario Hamuy; R. Chris Smith; Craig J. Hogan; Christopher W. Stubbs; Alan Hodgdon Diercks; David J. Reiss; R. L. Gilliland; John L. Tonry; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; A. Dressler; Jeremy R. Walsh; Robin Ciardullo
The High-Z Supernova Search is an international collaboration to discover and monitor Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) at z > 0.2 with the aim of measuring cosmic deceleration and global curvature. Our collaboration has pursued a basic understanding of supernovae in the nearby universe, discovering and observing a large sample of objects and developing methods to measure accurate distances with SNe Ia. This paper describes the extension of this program to z ≥ 0.2, outlining our search techniques and follow-up program. We have devised high-throughput filters that provide accurate two-color rest frame B and V light curves of SNe Ia, enabling us to produce precise, extinction-corrected luminosity distances in the range 0.25 M=-0.2 -->−0.8+1.0 if ΩΛ = 0. For a spatially flat universe composed of normal matter and a cosmological constant, we find Ω -->M=0.4 -->−0.4+0.5, Ω
The Astronomical Journal | 1999
Mark M. Phillips; Paulina Lira; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Robert A. Schommer; Mario Hamuy; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza
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The Astronomical Journal | 1996
Mario Hamuy; M. M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Robert A. Schommer; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Roberto Aviles
-->=0.6 -->−0.5+0.4. We demonstrate that with a sample of ~30 objects, we should be able to determine relative luminosity distances over the range 0 < z < 0.5 with sufficient precision to measure ΩM with an uncertainty of ±0.2.
Nature | 2003
Mario Hamuy; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; L. E. Gonzalez; M. Roth; Kevin Krisciunas; Nidia I. Morrell; Elizabeth M. Green; S. E. Persson; Patrick J. McCarthy
We develop a method for estimating the host galaxy dust extinction for type Ia supernovae based on an observational coincidence first noted by Lira, who found that the B-V evolution during the period from 30 to 90 days after V maximum is remarkably similar for all events, regardless of light-curve shape. This fact is used to calibrate the dependence of the Bmax-Vmax and Vmax-Imax colors on the light-curve decline rate parameter Δm15(B), which can, in turn, be used to separately estimate the host galaxy extinction. Using these methods to eliminate the effects of reddening, we reexamine the functional form of the decline rate versus luminosity relationship and provide an updated estimate of the Hubble constant of H0 = 63.3 ± 2.2(internal) ± 3.5(external) km s-1 Mpc-1.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2003
Thomas Matheson; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Krzysztof Zbigniew Stanek; D. F. Bersier; Stephen T. Holland; Kevin Krisciunas; Nelson Caldwell; Perry L. Berlind; J. S. Bloom; Michael Bolte; A. Z. Bonanos; Michael J. I. Brown; Warren R. Brown; M. Calkins; Peter M. Challis; Ryan Chornock; L. Echevarria; Daniel J. Eisenstein; Mark E. Everett; A. V. Filippenko; K. Flint; Ryan J. Foley; D. L. Freedman; Mario Hamuy; Paul Harding; Nimish P. Hathi; Malcolm Stuart Hicken; Charles G. Hoopes; C. D. Impey; Buell T. Jannuzi
We examine the absolute luminosities of 29 SNe Ia in the Calan/Tololo survey. We confirm a relation between the peak luminosity of the SNe and the decline rate as measured by the light curve, as suggested by Phillips (1993). We derive linear slopes to this magnitude-decline rate relation in BV(I)kc colors, using a sample with Bmax-Vmax < 0.2 mag. The scatter around this linear relation (and thus the ability to measure SNe Ia distances) ranges from 0.13 mag (in the I band) to 0.17 mag (in the B band). We also find evidence for significant correlations between the absolute magnitudes or the decline rate of the light curve, and the morphological type of the host galaxy.
The Astronomical Journal | 1996
Mario Hamuy; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Robert A. Schommer; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Roberto Aviles
Stars that explode as supernovae come in two main classes. A type Ia supernova is recognized by the absence of hydrogen and the presence of elements such as silicon and sulphur in its spectrum; this class of supernova is thought to produce the majority of iron-peak elements in the Universe. They are also used as precise ‘standard candles’ to measure the distances to galaxies. While there is general agreement that a type Ia supernova is produced by an exploding white dwarf star, no progenitor system has ever been directly observed. Significant effort has gone into searching for circumstellar material to help discriminate between the possible kinds of progenitor systems, but no such material has hitherto been found associated with a type Ia supernova. Here we report the presence of strong hydrogen emission associated with the type Ia supernova SN2002ic, indicating the presence of large amounts of circumstellar material. We infer from this that the progenitor system contained a massive asymptotic-giant-branch star that lost several solar masses of hydrogen-rich gas before the supernova explosion.
The Astronomical Journal | 1996
Mario Hamuy; Robert A. Schommer; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Mark M. Phillips
We present extensive optical and infrared photometry of the afterglow of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 030329 and its associated supernova (SN) 2003dh over the first two months after detection (2003 March 30-May 29 UT). Optical spectroscopy from a variety of telescopes is shown and, when combined with the photometry, allows an unambiguous separation between the afterglow and SN contributions. The optical afterglow of the GRB is initially a power-law continuum but shows significant color variations during the first week that are unrelated to the presence of an SN. The early afterglow light curve also shows deviations from the typical power-law decay. An SN spectrum is first detectable ~7 days after the burst and dominates the light after ~11 days. The spectral evolution and the light curve are shown to closely resemble those of SN 1998bw, a peculiar Type Ic SN associated with GRB 980425, and the time of the SN explosion is close to the observed time of the GRB. It is now clear that at least some GRBs arise from core-collapse SNe.
The Astronomical Journal | 1996
Mario Hamuy; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Robert A. Schommer; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Ryan Christopher Smith; P. Lira; Roberto Aviles
The Calan/Tololo supernova survey has discovered ~30 Type Ia supernovae out to z~0.1. Using BVI data for these objects and nearby SNe Ia, we have shown that there exists a significant dispersion in the intrinsic luminosities of these objects. We have devised a robust chisquare minimization technique simultaneously fitting the BVI light curves to parametrize the SN event as a function of (tb,m, m15(B)) where tb is the time of B maximum, m is the peak BVI magnitude corrected for luminosity variations, and m15(B) is a single parameter describing the whole light curve morphology. When properly corrected for m15(B), SNe Ia prove to be high precision distance indicators,yielding relative distances with errors 7-10%. The corrected peak magnitudes are used to construct BVI Hubble diagrams (HD), and with Cepheid distances recently measured with the HST to four nearby SNe Ia (37C, 72E, 81B, 90N) we derive a value of the Hubble constant of 63.1+/-3.4 (internal) km/s/Mpc. This value is ~10-15% larger than the value obtained by assuming that SNe Ia are perfect standard candles. As we have shown in Paper V, there is now strong evidence that galaxies with younger stellar population appear to host the slowest-declining, and therefore most luminous SNe Ia. Hence, the use of Pop I objects such as Cepheids to calibrate the zero point of the SNe Ia HD can easily bias the results toward luminous SNe Ia, unless the absolute magnitude-decline relation is taken into account.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2006
Mario Hamuy; Gaston Folatelli; Nidia I. Morrell; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; S. E. Persson; M. Roth; Sergio Gonzalez; Wojtek Krzeminski; Carlos Contreras; Wendy L. Freedman; David C. Murphy; Barry F. Madore; P. Wyatt; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Alexei V. Filippenko; Weidong Li; Philip A. Pinto
This paper was possible thanks to grant 92/0312 from Fondo Nacional de Ciencias y Tecnologia (FONDECYT- -Chile). M.H. acknowledges support provided for this work by the National Science Foundation through grant number GF-1002-96 from the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NSF Cooperative Agree ment No. AST-8947990 and from Fundacion Andes under project C-12984. J.M. and M.H. acknowledge support by Catedra Presidencial de Ciencias 1996-1997.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1994
Brian Paul Schmidt; Robert P. Kirshner; Ronald G. Eastman; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Mario Hamuy; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Roberto Aviles
We present a family of six BVI template light curves for SNe Ia for days -5 and +80, based on high-quality data gathered at CTIO. These templates display a wide range of light curve morphologies, with initial decline rates of their B light curves between m15(B)=0.87 mag and 1.93 mag. We use these templates to study the general morphology of SNe Ia light curves. We find that several of the main features of the BVI templates correlate tightly with m15(B). In particular, the V light curves, which are probably a reasonably good approximation of the bolometric light curves, display an orderly progression in shapes between the most-luminous, slowest-declining events and the least-luminous, fastest-declining SNe. This supports the idea that the observed spectroscopic and photometric sequences of SNe Ia are due primarily to one parameter. Nevertheless, SNe with very similar initial decline rates do show significant differences in their light curve properties when examined in detail, suggesting the influence of one or more secondary parameters.