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The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Pan-STARRS1 DISCOVERY OF TWO ULTRALUMINOUS SUPERNOVAE AT z ≈ 0.9

Laura Chomiuk; Ryan Chornock; Alicia M. Soderberg; Edo Berger; Roger A. Chevalier; Ryan J. Foley; M. E. Huber; Gautham S. Narayan; Armin Rest; S. Gezari; Robert P. Kirshner; Adam G. Riess; Steven A. Rodney; S. J. Smartt; Christopher W. Stubbs; John L. Tonry; William Michael Wood-Vasey; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; Ian Czekala; H. Flewelling; K. Forster; N. Kaiser; R.-P. Kudritzki; E. A. Magnier; D. C. Martin; Jeffrey S. Morgan; James D. Neill; P. A. Price; Kathy Roth

We present the discovery of two ultraluminous supernovae (SNe) at z ≈ 0.9 with the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey. These SNe, PS1-10ky and PS1-10awh, are among the most luminous SNe ever discovered, comparable to the unusual transients SN 2005ap and SCP 06F6. Like SN 2005ap and SCP 06F6, they show characteristic high luminosities (M_(bol) ≈ –22.5 mag), blue spectra with a few broad absorption lines, and no evidence for H or He. We have constructed a full multi-color light curve sensitive to the peak of the spectral energy distribution in the rest-frame ultraviolet, and we have obtained time series spectroscopy for these SNe. Given the similarities between the SNe, we combine their light curves to estimate a total radiated energy over the course of explosion of (0.9-1.4) × 10^(51) erg. We find photospheric velocities of 12,000-19,000 km s^(–1) with no evidence for deceleration measured across ~3 rest-frame weeks around light curve peak, consistent with the expansion of an optically thick massive shell of material. We show that, consistent with findings for other ultraluminous SNe in this class, radioactive decay is not sufficient to power PS1-10ky, and we discuss two plausible origins for these events: the initial spin-down of a newborn magnetar in a core-collapse SN, or SN shock breakout from the dense circumstellar wind surrounding a Wolf-Rayet star.


Nature | 2014

Asymmetries in core-collapse supernovae from maps of radioactive 44 Ti in Cassiopeia A

Brian W. Grefenstette; Fiona A. Harrison; S. E. Boggs; Stephen P. Reynolds; Christopher L. Fryer; K. K. Madsen; Daniel R. Wik; Andreas Zoglauer; C I Ellinger; D. M. Alexander; Hongjun An; Didier Barret; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; K. Forster; P. Giommi; C. J. Hailey; A. Hornstrup; V. M. Kaspi; Takao Kitaguchi; Jason E. Koglin; Peter H. Mao; Hiromasa Miyasaka; Kaya Mori; Matteo Perri; M. Pivovaroff; S. Puccetti; V. Rana; D. Stern; Niels Jørgen Stenfeldt Westergaard

Asymmetry is required by most numerical simulations of stellar core-collapse explosions, but the form it takes differs significantly among models. The spatial distribution of radioactive 44Ti, synthesized in an exploding star near the boundary between material falling back onto the collapsing core and that ejected into the surrounding medium, directly probes the explosion asymmetries. Cassiopeiau2009A is a young, nearby, core-collapse remnant from which 44Ti emission has previously been detected but not imaged. Asymmetries in the explosion have been indirectly inferred from a high ratio of observed 44Ti emission to estimated 56Ni emission, from optical light echoes, and from jet-like features seen in the X-ray and optical ejecta. Here we report spatial maps and spectral properties of the 44Ti in Cassiopeia A. This may explain the unexpected lack of correlation between the 44Ti and iron X-ray emission, the latter being visible only in shock-heated material. The observed spatial distribution rules out symmetric explosions even with a high level of convective mixing, as well as highly asymmetric bipolar explosions resulting from a fast-rotating progenitor. Instead, these observations provide strong evidence for the development of low-mode convective instabilities in core-collapse supernovae.


Science | 2017

Swift and NuSTAR observations of GW170817: Detection of a blue kilonova

P. A. Evans; S. B. Cenko; J. A. Kennea; S. W. K. Emery; N. P. M. Kuin; Oleg Korobkin; Ryan T. Wollaeger; Christopher L. Fryer; K. K. Madsen; Fiona A. Harrison; Yanjun Xu; Ehud Nakar; Kenta Hotokezaka; Amy Lien; Sergio Campana; S. R. Oates; Eleonora Troja; Alice A. Breeveld; F. E. Marshall; S. D. Barthelmy; A. P. Beardmore; D. N. Burrows; G. Cusumano; A. D’Aì; P. D’Avanzo; V. D’Elia; M. De Pasquale; Wesley Even; Christopher J. Fontes; K. Forster

GROWTH observations of GW170817 The gravitational wave event GW170817 was caused by the merger of two neutron stars (see the Introduction by Smith). In three papers, teams associated with the GROWTH (Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen) project present their observations of the event at wavelengths from x-rays to radio waves. Evans et al. used space telescopes to detect GW170817 in the ultraviolet and place limits on its x-ray flux, showing that the merger generated a hot explosion known as a blue kilonova. Hallinan et al. describe radio emissions generated as the explosion slammed into the surrounding gas within the host galaxy. Kasliwal et al. present additional observations in the optical and infrared and formulate a model for the event involving a cocoon of material expanding at close to the speed of light, matching the data at all observed wavelengths. Science, this issue p. 1565, p. 1579, p. 1559; see also p. 1554 Ultraviolet and x-ray observations of a binary neutron star merger show a hot kilonova but no jet along the line of sight. With the first direct detection of merging black holes in 2015, the era of gravitational wave (GW) astrophysics began. A complete picture of compact object mergers, however, requires the detection of an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart. We report ultraviolet (UV) and x-ray observations by Swift and the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array of the EM counterpart of the binary neutron star merger GW170817. The bright, rapidly fading UV emission indicates a high mass (≈0.03 solar masses) wind-driven outflow with moderate electron fraction (Ye ≈ 0.27). Combined with the x-ray limits, we favor an observer viewing angle of ≈30° away from the orbital rotation axis, which avoids both obscuration from the heaviest elements in the orbital plane and a direct view of any ultrarelativistic, highly collimated ejecta (a γ-ray burst afterglow).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Rapid variability of blazar 3C 279 during flaring states in 2013-2014 with joint FERMI-LAT, NuSTAR, SWIFT, and ground-based multi-wavelength observations

M. Hayashida; Krzysztof Nalewajko; G. M. Madejski; Marek Sikora; R. Itoh; M. Ajello; R. D. Blandford; S. Buson; J. Chiang; Yasushi Fukazawa; A. K. Furniss; Claudia M. Urry; I. Hasan; Fiona A. Harrison; D. M. Alexander; M. Baloković; Didier Barret; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; W. W. Craig; K. Forster; Paolo Giommi; Brian W. Grefenstette; C. Hailey; A. Hornstrup; Takao Kitaguchi; Jason E. Koglin; K. K. Madsen; Peter H. Mao; Hiromasa Miyasaka

We report the results of a multiband observing campaign on the famous blazar 3C 279 conducted during a phase of increased activity from 2013 December to 2014 April, including first observations of it with NuSTAR. The gamma-ray emission of the source measured by Fermi-LAT showed multiple distinct flares reaching the highest flux level measured in this object since the beginning of the Fermi mission, with F(E > 100 MeV) of 10^(-5) photons cm^(-2) s^(-1), and with a flux-doubling time scale as short as 2 hr. The gamma-ray spectrum during one of the flares was very hard, with an index of Gamma(gamma) = 1.7 +/- 0.1, which is rarely seen in flat-spectrum radio quasars. The lack of concurrent optical variability implies a very high Compton dominance parameter L-gamma/L-syn > 300. Two 1 day NuSTAR observations with accompanying Swift pointings were separated by 2 weeks, probing different levels of source activity. While the 0.5 - 70 keV X-ray spectrum obtained during the first pointing, and fitted jointly with Swift-XRT is well-described by a simple power law, the second joint observation showed an unusual spectral structure: the spectrum softens by Delta Gamma(X) similar or equal to 0.4 at similar to 4 keV. Modeling the broadband spectral energy distribution during this flare with the standard synchrotron plus inverse-Compton model requires: (1) the location of the gamma-ray emitting region is comparable with the broad-line region radius, (2) a very hard electron energy distribution index p similar or equal to 1, (3) total jet power significantly exceeding the accretion-disk luminosity L-j/L-d greater than or similar to 10, and (4) extremely low jet magnetization with L-B/L-j less than or similar to 10^(-4). We also find that single-zone models that match the observed gamma-ray and optical spectra cannot satisfactorily explain the production of X-ray emission.


Science | 2015

44Ti gamma-ray emission lines from SN1987A reveal an asymmetric explosion

S. E. Boggs; Fiona A. Harrison; Hiromasa Miyasaka; Brian W. Grefenstette; Andreas Zoglauer; Chris L. Fryer; Stephen P. Reynolds; D. M. Alexander; Hongjun An; Didier Barret; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; K. Forster; P. Giommi; Charles J. Hailey; A. Hornstrup; Takao Kitaguchi; Jason E. Koglin; Kristin K. Madsen; Peter H. Mao; Kaya Mori; Matteo Perri; Michael J. Pivovaroff; S. Puccetti; V. Rana; D. Stern; Niels Jørgen Stenfeldt Westergaard; William W. Zhang

Stellar metals shine toward our eyes only Taking a different look at a familiar star may still yield surprises. Boggs et al. trained the x-ray vision of the NuSTAR observatory on the well-studied supernova 1987A. Core-collapse explosions such as SN 1987A produce a titanium isotope, 44Ti, whose radioactive decay yields hard x-ray emission lines. All the emission associated with 44Ti appears to be from material moving toward us, with none moving away. This implies that the explosion was not symmetric. These findings help to explain the mechanics of SN 1987A and of core-collapse supernovae in general. Science, this issue p. 670 Asymmetric signatures of radioactive decay are seen from a metal deep within a supernova. In core-collapse supernovae, titanium-44 (44Ti) is produced in the innermost ejecta, in the layer of material directly on top of the newly formed compact object. As such, it provides a direct probe of the supernova engine. Observations of supernova 1987A (SN1987A) have resolved the 67.87- and 78.32–kilo–electron volt emission lines from decay of 44Ti produced in the supernova explosion. These lines are narrow and redshifted with a Doppler velocity of ~700 kilometers per second, direct evidence of large-scale asymmetry in the explosion.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: Overview and catalog from the COSMOS field

F. Civano; R. C. Hickox; S. Puccetti; A. Comastri; J. R. Mullaney; L. Zappacosta; Stephanie M. LaMassa; James Aird; D. M. Alexander; D. R. Ballantyne; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; A. Del-Moro; M. Elvis; K. Forster; P. Gandhi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Fiona A. Harrison; G. B. Lansbury; B. Luo; K. K. Madsen; C. Saez; D. Stern; Ezequiel Treister; Meg Urry; Daniel R. Wik

To provide the census of the sources contributing to the X-ray background peak above 10 keV, NuSTAR is performing extragalactic surveys using a three-tier wedding cake approach. We present the NuSTAR survey of the COSMOS field, the medium sensitivity and medium area tier, covering 1.7 deg2 and overlapping with both Chandra and XMM-Newton data. This survey consists of 121 observations for a total exposure of ~3 Ms. To fully exploit these data, we developed a new detection strategy, carefully tested through extensive simulations. The survey sensitivity at 20% completeness is 5.9, 2.9 and 6.4 x 10^-14 erg/cm2/s in the 3-24 keV, 3-8 keV and 8-24 keV bands, respectively. By combining detections in 3 bands, we have a sample of 91 NuSTAR sources with 10^42 -10^45.5 erg/s luminosities and redshift z=0.04-2.5. Thirty two sources are detected in the 8-24 keV band with fluxes ~100 times fainter than sources detected by Swift-BAT. Of the 91 detections, all but four are associated with a Chandra and/or XMM-Newton point-like counterpart. One source is associated with an extended lower energy X-ray source. We present the X-ray (hardness ratio and luminosity) and optical-to-X-ray properties. The observed fraction of candidate Compton-thick AGN measured from the hardness ratio is between 13-20%. We discuss the spectral properties of NuSTAR J100259+0220.6 (ID 330) at z=0.044, with the highest hardness ratio in the entire sample. The measured column density exceeds 10^24 /cm2, implying the source is Compton-thick. This source was not previously recognized as such without the >10 keV data.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

THE GALEX TIME DOMAIN SURVEY. I. SELECTION AND CLASSIFICATION OF OVER A THOUSAND ULTRAVIOLET VARIABLE SOURCES

S. Gezari; D. C. Martin; K. Forster; James D. Neill; M. E. Huber; Timothy M. Heckman; Luciana Bianchi; Patrick Morrissey; Susan G. Neff; Mark Seibert; D. Schiminovich; T. K. Wyder; W. S. Burgett; K. C. Chambers; Nick Kaiser; E. A. Magnier; P. A. Price; John L. Tonry

We present the selection and classification of over a thousand ultraviolet (UV) variable sources discovered in n∼40 deg^2 of GALEX Time Domain Survey (TDS) NUV images observed with a cadence of 2 days and a baseline nof observations of ∼3 years. The GALEX TDS fields were designed to be in spatial and temporal coordination with nthe Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey, which provides deep optical imaging and simultaneous optical transient ndetections via image differencing.We characterize the GALEX photometric errors empirically as a function of mean nmagnitude, and select sources that vary at the 5σ level in at least one epoch. We measure the statistical properties nof the UV variability, including the structure function on timescales of days and years. We report classifications for nthe GALEX TDS sample using a combination of optical host colors and morphology, UV light curve characteristics, nand matches to archival X-ray, and spectroscopy catalogs. We classify 62% of the sources as active galaxies (358 nquasars and 305 active galactic nuclei), and 10% as variable stars (including 37 RR Lyrae, 53 M dwarf flare stars, and 2 cataclysmic variables). We detect a large-amplitude tail in the UV variability distribution for M-dwarf flare stars and RR Lyrae, reaching up to |Δm| = 4.6 mag and 2.9 mag, respectively. The mean amplitude of the structure function for quasars on year timescales is five times larger than observed at optical wavelengths. The remaining unclassified sources include UV-bright extragalactic transients, two of which have been spectroscopically confirmed to be a young core-collapse supernova and a flare from the tidal disruption of a star by dormant supermassive black hole. We calculate a surface density for variable sources in the UV with NUV 0.2 mag of ∼8.0, 7.7, and 1.8 deg^(−2) for quasars, active galactic nuclei, and RR Lyrae stars, respectively. We also calculate a surface density rate in the UV for transient sources, using the effective survey time at the cadence appropriate to each class, of ∼15 and 52 deg^(−2) yr^(−1) for M dwarfs and extragalactic transients, respectively.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE NuSTAR EXTRAGALACTIC SURVEYS: THE NUMBER COUNTS OF ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI AND THE RESOLVED FRACTION OF THE COSMIC X-RAY BACKGROUND

Fiona A. Harrison; James Aird; F. Civano; G. B. Lansbury; J. R. Mullaney; D. R. Ballantyne; D. M. Alexander; D. Stern; M. Ajello; Didier Barret; F. E. Bauer; M. Baloković; W. N. Brandt; M. Brightman; S. E. Boggs; Finn Erland Christensen; A. Comastri; William W. Craig; A. Del Moro; K. Forster; P. Gandhi; Paolo Giommi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; R. C. Hickox; A. Hornstrup; Takao Kitaguchi; Jason E. Koglin; B. Luo; Kristin K. Madsen

We present the 3–8 keV and 8–24 keV number counts of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) identified in the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) extragalactic surveys. NuSTAR has now resolved 33%–39% of the X-ray background in the 8–24 keV band, directly identifying AGNs with obscuring columns up to ~10^(25) cm^(-2). In the softer 3–8 keV band the number counts are in general agreement with those measured by XMM-Newton and Chandra over the flux range 5 x 10^(-15) ≾S(3–8 keV)/erg s^(-1) cm^(-2) ≾10^(-12) probed by NuSTAR. In the hard 8–24 keV band NuSTAR probes fluxes over the range 2 x 10^(-14) ≾ S(8–24 keV)/ erg s^(-1) cm^(-2) ≾ 10^_12), a factor ~100 fainter than previous measurements. The 8–24 keV number counts match predictions from AGN population synthesis models, directly confirming the existence of a population of obscured and/or hard X-ray sources inferred from the shape of the integrated cosmic X-ray background. The measured NuSTAR counts lie significantly above simple extrapolation with a Euclidian slope to low flux of the Swift/BAT 15–55 keV number counts measured at higher fluxes (S(15–55 keV) ≳10^(−11) erg s^(-1) cm^(-2)), reflecting the evolution of the AGN population between the Swift/BAT local (z < 0.1) sample and NuSTARs z ~ 1 sample. CXB synthesis models, which account for AGN evolution, lie above the Swift/BAT measurements, suggesting that they do not fully capture the evolution of obscured AGNs at low redshifts.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The NuSTAR Extragalactic Surveys: First Direct Measurements of the > 10 keV X-Ray Luminosity Function for Active Galactic Nuclei at z > 0.1

James Aird; D. M. Alexander; D. R. Ballantyne; F. Civano; A. Del-Moro; R. C. Hickox; G. B. Lansbury; J. R. Mullaney; F. E. Bauer; W. N. Brandt; A. Comastri; A. C. Fabian; P. Gandhi; Fiona A. Harrison; B. Luo; D. Stern; Ezequiel Treister; L. Zappacosta; M. Ajello; Roberto J. Assef; M. Baloković; S. E. Boggs; M. Brightman; Finn Erland Christensen; William W. Craig; M. Elvis; K. Forster; Brian W. Grefenstette; Charles J. Hailey; Michael Koss

We present the first direct measurements of the rest-frame 10–40 keV X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) based on a sample of 94 sources at 0.1 < z < 3, selected at 8–24 keV energies from sources in the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) extragalactic survey program. Our results are consistent with the strong evolution of the AGN population seen in prior, lower-energy studies of the XLF. However, different models of the intrinsic distribution of absorption, which are used to correct for selection biases, give significantly different predictions for the total number of sources in our sample, leading to small, systematic differences in our binned estimates of the XLF. Adopting a model with a lower intrinsic fraction of Compton-thick sources and a larger population of sources with column densities N_H ~ 10^(23-24) cm^(−2) or a model with stronger Compton reflection component (with a relative normalization of R ~ 2 at all luminosities) can bring extrapolations of the XLF from 2–10 keV into agreement with our NuSTAR sample. Ultimately, X-ray spectral analysis of the NuSTAR sources is required to break this degeneracy between the distribution of absorbing column densities and the strength of the Compton reflection component and thus refine our measurements of the XLF. Furthermore, the models that successfully describe the high-redshift population seen by NuSTAR tend to over-predict previous, high-energy measurements of the local XLF, indicating that there is evolution of the AGN population that is not fully captured by the current models.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Living on a Flare: Relativistic Reflection in V404 Cyg Observed by NuSTAR during Its Summer 2015 Outburst

D. J. Walton; K. Mooley; Ashley L. King; John A. Tomsick; Josef M. Miller; T. Dauser; J. Garcia; Matteo Bachetti; M. Brightman; A. C. Fabian; K. Forster; Felix Fürst; P. Gandhi; Brian W. Grefenstette; Fiona A. Harrison; K. K. Madsen; David L. Meier; Matthew J. Middleton; L. Natalucci; Farid Rahoui; V. Rana; D. Stern

We present first results from a series of NuSTAR observations of the black hole X-ray binary V404 Cyg obtained during its summer 2015 outburst, primarily focusing on observations during the height of this outburst activity. The NuSTAR data show extreme variability in both the flux and spectral properties of the source. This is partly driven by strong and variable line-of-sight absorption, similar to previous outbursts. The latter stages of this observation are dominated by strong flares, reaching luminosities close to Eddington. During these flares, the central source appears to be relatively unobscured and the data show clear evidence for a strong contribution from relativistic reflection, providing a means to probe the geometry of the innermost accretion flow. Based on the flare properties, analogies with other Galactic black hole binaries, and also the simultaneous onset of radio activity, we argue that this intense X-ray flaring is related to transient jet activity during which the ejected plasma is the primary source of illumination for the accretion disk. If this is the case, then our reflection modeling implies that these jets are launched in close proximity to the black hole (as close as a few gravitational radii), consistent with expectations for jet launching models that tap either the spin of the central black hole, or the very innermost accretion disk. Our analysis also allows us to place the first constraints on the black hole spin for this source, which we find to be a* > 0.92 (99% statistical uncertainty, based on an idealized lamp-post geometry).

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Fiona A. Harrison

California Institute of Technology

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Brian W. Grefenstette

California Institute of Technology

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Finn Erland Christensen

Technical University of Denmark

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S. E. Boggs

University of California

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D. Stern

California Institute of Technology

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K. K. Madsen

California Institute of Technology

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M. Baloković

California Institute of Technology

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