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Nature | 1998

An Unusual Supernova in the Error Box of the Gamma-Ray Burst of 25 April 1998

Titus J. Galama; Paul M. Vreeswijk; J. van Paradijs; C. Kouveliotou; T. Augusteijn; H. Böhnhardt; James Brewer; V. Doublier; J.-F. Gonzalez; Bruno Leibundgut; C. Lidman; Olivier R. Hainaut; Ferdinando Patat; J. Heise; J. in't Zand; Kevin C. Hurley; P. Groot; R. Strom; Paolo A. Mazzali; Koichi Iwamoto; K. Nomoto; Hideyuki Umeda; Takashi Nakamura; T. R. Young; T. Suzuki; T. Shigeyama; T. M. Koshut; Marc Kippen; C. R. Robinson; P. de Wildt

The discovery of afterglows associated with γ-ray bursts at X-ray, optical and radio wavelengths and the measurement of the redshifts of some of these events, has established that γ-ray bursts lie at extreme distances, making them the most powerful photon-emitters known in the Universe. Here we report the discovery of transient optical emission in the error box of the γ-ray burst GRB980425, the light curve of which was very different from that of previous optical afterglows associated with γ-ray bursts. The optical transient is located in a spiral arm of the galaxy ESO184-G82, which has a redshift velocity of only 2,550 km s−1 (ref. 6). Its optical spectrum and location indicate that it is a very luminous supernova, which has been identified as SN1998bw. If this supernova and GRB980425 are indeed associated, the energy radiated in γ-rays is at least four orders of magnitude less than in other γ-ray bursts, although its appearance was otherwise unremarkable: this indicates that very different mechanisms can give rise to γ-ray bursts. But independent of this association, the supernova is itself unusual, exhibiting an unusual light curve at radio wavelengths that requires that the gas emitting the radio photons be expanding relativistically,.on April 25.90915 UT with one of the Wide Field Cameras(WFCs) and the Gamma Ray Burst Monitor (GRBM) on board BeppoSAX, and with the Burst andTransient Source Experiment (BATSE) on board the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO).The BATSE burst profile consists of a single wide peak. The burst flux rose in ∼ 5 s to amaximum flux of (3.0± 0.3)×10


Nature | 1998

A 'hypernova' model for the supernova associated with the gamma-ray burst of 25 April 1998

Koichi Iwamoto; Paolo A. Mazzali; K. Nomoto; Hideyuki Umeda; Takashi Nakamura; Ferdinando Patat; I. J. Danziger; T. R. Young; T. Suzuki; T. Shigeyama; T. Augusteijn; V. Doublier; J.-F. Gonzalez; H. Boehnhardt; J. Brewer; Olivier R. Hainaut; C. Lidman; Bruno Leibundgut; E. Cappellaro; Massimo Turatto; Titus J. Galama; Paul M. Vreeswijk; C. Kouveliotou; J. van Paradijs; E. Pian; E. Palazzi; F. Frontera

The discovery of the unusual supernova SN1998bw, and its possible association with the γ-ray burst GRB 980425, provide new insights into the explosion mechanism of very massive stars and the origin of some classes of γ-ray bursts. Optical spectra indicate that SN1998bw is a type Ic supernova,, but its peak luminosity is unusually high compared with typical type Ic supernovae. Here we report our findings that the optical spectra and the light curve of SN1998bw can be well reproduced by an extremely energetic explosion of a massive star composed mainly of carbon and oxygen (having lost its hydrogen and helium envelopes). The kinetic energy of the ejecta is as large as +(2–5)× 1052 erg, more than ten times that of previously observed supernovae. This type of supernova could therefore be termed ‘hypernova’. The extremely large energy suggests the existence of a new mechanism of massive star explosion that can also produce the relativistic shocks necessary to generate the observed γ-rays.


Nature | 2006

An optical supernova associated with the X-ray flash XRF 060218

E. Pian; Paolo A. Mazzali; N. Masetti; P. Ferrero; Sylvio Klose; Eliana Palazzi; Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz; S. E. Woosley; C. Kouveliotou; J. S. Deng; A. V. Filippenko; Ryan J. Foley; J. P. U. Fynbo; D. A. Kann; Weidong Li; J. Hjorth; K. Nomoto; Ferdinando Patat; Daniel Sauer; Jesper Sollerman; Paul M. Vreeswijk; E. W. Guenther; A. Levan; Paul T. O'Brien; Nial R. Tanvir; R. A. M. J. Wijers; Christophe Dumas; Olivier R. Hainaut; Diane S. Wong; Dietrich Baade

Long-duration γ-ray bursts (GRBs) are associated with type Ic supernovae that are more luminous than average and that eject material at very high velocities. Less-luminous supernovae were not hitherto known to be associated with GRBs, and therefore GRB–supernovae were thought to be rare events. Whether X-ray flashes—analogues of GRBs, but with lower luminosities and fewer γ-rays—can also be associated with supernovae, and whether they are intrinsically ‘weak’ events or typical GRBs viewed off the axis of the burst, is unclear. Here we report the optical discovery and follow-up observations of the type Ic supernova SN 2006aj associated with X-ray flash XRF 060218. Supernova 2006aj is intrinsically less luminous than the GRB–supernovae, but more luminous than many supernovae not accompanied by a GRB. The ejecta velocities derived from our spectra are intermediate between these two groups, which is consistent with the weakness of both the GRB output and the supernova radio flux. Our data, combined with radio and X-ray observations, suggest that XRF 060218 is an intrinsically weak and soft event, rather than a classical GRB observed off-axis. This extends the GRB–supernova connection to X-ray flashes and fainter supernovae, implying a common origin. Events such as XRF 060218 are probably more numerous than GRB–supernovae.


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.


Nature | 2009

Supernova 2007bi as a pair-instability explosion

Avishay Gal-Yam; Paolo A. Mazzali; Eran O. Ofek; Peter E. Nugent; S. R. Kulkarni; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Robert Michael Quimby; A. V. Filippenko; S. B. Cenko; Ryan Chornock; Roni Waldman; D. Kasen; Edward C. Beshore; Andrew J. Drake; R. C. Thomas; J. S. Bloom; Dovi Poznanski; Adam A. Miller; Ryan J. Foley; Jeffrey M. Silverman; Iair Arcavi; Richard S. Ellis; J. S. Deng

Stars with initial masses such that 10 ≤ Minitial ≤ 100, where is the solar mass, fuse progressively heavier elements in their centres, until the core is inert iron. The core then gravitationally collapses to a neutron star or a black hole, leading to an explosion—an iron-core-collapse supernova. By contrast, extremely massive stars with Minitial ≥ 140 (if such exist) develop oxygen cores with masses, Mcore, that exceed 50, where high temperatures are reached at relatively low densities. Conversion of energetic, pressure-supporting photons into electron–positron pairs occurs before oxygen ignition and leads to a violent contraction which triggers a nuclear explosion that unbinds the star in a pair-instability supernova. Transitional objects with 100 < Minitial < 140 may end up as iron-core-collapse supernovae following violent mass ejections, perhaps as a result of brief episodes of pair instability, and may already have been identified. Here we report observations of supernova SN 2007bi, a luminous, slowly evolving object located within a dwarf galaxy. We estimate the exploding core mass to be Mcore ≈ 100, in which case theory unambiguously predicts a pair-instability supernova. We show that >3 of radioactive 56Ni was synthesized during the explosion and that our observations are well fitted by models of pair-instability supernovae. This indicates that nearby dwarf galaxies probably host extremely massive stars, above the apparent Galactic stellar mass limit, which perhaps result from processes similar to those that created the first stars in the Universe.


Science | 2007

Detection of Circumstellar Material in a Normal Type Ia Supernova

Ferdinando Patat; P. Chandra; Roger A. Chevalier; Stephen Justham; Ph. Podsiadlowski; C. Wolf; A. Gal-Yam; L. Pasquini; Ian A. Crawford; Paolo A. Mazzali; A.W.A. Pauldrach; K. Nomoto; Stefano Benetti; Enrico Cappellaro; N. Elias-Rosa; W. Hillebrandt; Douglas C. Leonard; Andrea Pastorello; A. Renzini; F. Sabbadin; J. D. Simon; M. Turatto

Type Ia supernovae are important cosmological distance indicators. Each of these bright supernovae supposedly results from the thermonuclear explosion of a white dwarf star that, after accreting material from a companion star, exceeds some mass limit, but the true nature of the progenitor star system remains controversial. Here we report the spectroscopic detection of circumstellar material in a normal type Ia supernova explosion. The expansion velocities, densities, and dimensions of the circumstellar envelope indicate that this material was ejected from the progenitor system. In particular, the relatively low expansion velocities suggest that the white dwarf was accreting material from a companion star that was in the red-giant phase at the time of the explosion.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

The Diversity of Type Ia Supernovae: Evidence for Systematics?

Stefano Benetti; E. Cappellaro; Paolo A. Mazzali; Massimo Turatto; G. Altavilla; F. Bufano; N. Elias-Rosa; R. Kotak; Giuliano Pignata; Maria Elena Salvo; V. Stanishev

The photometric and spectroscopic properties of 26 well-observed Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) were analyzed with the aim of exploring SN Ia diversity. The sample includes (Branch) normal SNe, as well as extreme events such as SN 1991Tand SN 1991bg, while the truly peculiar SNe Ia, SN 2000cx and SN 2002cx, are not included in our sample. A statistical treatment reveals the existence of three different groups. The first group (FAINT) consists offaint SNe Ia similar to SN 1991bg, with low expansion velocities and rapid evolution of Si ii velocity. A second groupconsists of normal SNe Ia, also with high temporalvelocity gradient (HVG),butwithbrighter mean absolute magnitude hMB i¼� 19:3 and higher expansion velocities than the FAINT SNe. The third group includes both normal and SN 1991T-like SNe Ia: these SNe populate a narrow strip in the Siiivelocity evolution plot, with a lowvelocity gradient (LVG), but have absolute magnitudes similar to HVGs. While the FAINT and HVG SNe Ia togetherseemtodefinearelationbetweenR(Siii)andm15(B),theLVGSNeeitherdonotconformtothatrelation or define a new, looser one. The R(Siii) premaximum evolution of HVGs is strikingly different from that of LVGs. We discuss the impact of this evidence on the understanding of SN Ia diversity, in terms of explosion mechanisms, degree of ejecta mixing, and ejecta‐circumstellar material interaction. Subject heading g: supernovae: general


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

The Metamorphosis of SN 1998bw

Ferdinando Patat; E. Cappellaro; J. Danziger; Paolo A. Mazzali; Jesper Sollerman; T. Augusteijn; James Brewer; V. Doublier; J.-F. Gonzalez; Olivier R. Hainaut; C. Lidman; Bruno Leibundgut; K. Nomoto; Takayoshi Nakamura; Jason Spyromilio; Luca Rizzi; Massimo Turatto; Jeremy R. Walsh; Titus J. Galama; Jan van Paradijs; C. Kouveliotou; Paul M. Vreeswijk; Filippo Frontera; Nicola Masetti; Eliana Palazzi; E. Pian

We present and discuss the photometric and spectroscopic evolution of the peculiar SN 1998bw, associated with GRB 980425, through an analysis of optical and near-IR data collected at ESOLa Silla. The spectroscopic data, spanning the period from day ( 9t o day)376 (relative to B maximum), have shown that this supernova (SN) was unprecedented, although somewhat similar to SN 1997ef. Maximum expansion velocities as high as 3 ) 104 km s~1 to some extent mask its resemblance to other Type Ic SNe. At intermediate phases, between photospheric and fully nebular, the expansion velocities (D104 km s~1) remained exceptionally high compared to those of other recorded core-collapse SNe at a similar phase. The mild linear polarization detected at early epochs suggests the presence of asymmetry in the emitting material. The degree of asymmetry, however, cannot be decoded from these measurements alone. The He I 1.083 and 2.058 km lines are identi—ed, and He is suggested to lie in an outer region of the envelope. The temporal behavior of the —uxes and pro—les of emission lines of Mg I) j4571, (O I) jj6300, 6364, and a feature ascribed to Fe are traced to stimulate future modeling work. The uniqueness of SN 1998bw became less obvious once it entered the fully nebular phase (after 1 yr), when it was very similar to other Type Ib/cIIb objects, such as the Type Ib SN 1996N and the Type IIb SN 1993J, even though SN 1998bw was 1.4 mag brighter than SN 1993J and 3 mag brighter than SN 1996N at a com- parable phase. The late-phase optical photometry, which extends up to 403 days after B maximum, shows that the SN luminosity declined exponentially but substantially faster than the decay rate of 56Co. The ultraviolet-optical-infrared bolometric light curve, constructed using all available optical data and the early JHK photometry presented in this work, shows a slight —attening starting on about day )300. Since no clear evidence of ejecta-wind interaction was found in the late-time spectroscopy (see also the work of Sollerman and coworkers), this may be due to the contribution of the positrons since most c-rays escape thermalization at this phase. A contribution from the superposed H II region cannot, however, be excluded. Subject headings: gamma rays: burstssupernovae: generalsupernovae: individual (SN 1998bw)


The Astrophysical Journal | 2004

SN 2003lw and GRB 031203: A Bright Supernova for a Faint Gamma-Ray Burst

Daniele Malesani; Gianpiero Tagliaferri; Guido Chincarini; S. Covino; M. Della Valle; Dino Fugazza; Paolo A. Mazzali; Filippo Maria Zerbi; Paolo D'Avanzo; S. Kalogerakos; A. Simoncelli; L. A. Antonelli; L. Burderi; Sergio Campana; A. Cucchiara; F. Fiore; G. Ghirlanda; Paolo Goldoni; Diego Gotz; S. Mereghetti; I. F. Mirabel; Patrizia Romano; L. Stella; Takeo Minezaki; Yuzuru Yoshii; K. Nomoto

Optical and near-infrared observations of the gamma-ray burst GRB 031203, at z = 0.1055, are reported. A very faint afterglow is detected superposed onto the host galaxy in our first infrared JHK observations, carried out ~9 hr after the burst. Subsequently, a rebrightening is detected in all bands, peaking in the R band about 18 rest-frame days after the burst. The rebrightening closely resembles the light curve of a supernova like SN 1998bw, assuming that the GRB and the SN went off almost simultaneously, but with a somewhat slower evolution. Spectra taken close to the maximum of the rebrightening show extremely broad features as in SN 1998bw. The determination of the absolute magnitude of this SN (SN 2003lw) is difficult owing to the large and uncertain extinction, but likely this event was brighter than SN 1998bw by 0.5 mag in the VRI bands, reaching an absolute magnitude MV = -19.75 ± 0.15.


Nature | 2006

A neutron-star-driven X-ray flash associated with supernova SN 2006aj

Paolo A. Mazzali; J. S. Deng; K. Nomoto; Daniel Sauer; E. Pian; Nozomu Tominaga; Masaomi Tanaka; Kei-ichi Maeda; Alexei V. Filippenko

Supernovae connected with long-duration γ-ray bursts (GRBs) are hyper-energetic explosions resulting from the collapse of very massive stars (∼40 M[circdot], where M[circdot] is the mass of the Sun) stripped of their outer hydrogen and helium envelopes. A very massive progenitor, collapsing to a black hole, was thought to be a requirement for the launch of a GRB. Here we report the results of modelling the spectra and light curve of SN 2006aj (ref. 9), which demonstrate that the supernova had a much smaller explosion energy and ejected much less mass than the other GRB–supernovae, suggesting that it was produced by a star whose initial mass was only ∼20 M[circdot]. A star of this mass is expected to form a neutron star rather than a black hole when its core collapses. The smaller explosion energy of SN 2006aj is matched by the weakness and softness of GRB 060218 (an X-ray flash), and the weakness of the radio flux of the supernova. Our results indicate that the supernova–GRB connection extends to a much broader range of stellar masses than previously thought, possibly involving different physical mechanisms: a ‘collapsar’ (ref. 8) for the more massive stars collapsing to a black hole, and magnetic activity of the nascent neutron star for the less massive stars.

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Stefano Benetti

Astronomical Observatory of Capodimonte

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Keiichi Maeda

Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe

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Ferdinando Patat

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Avishay Gal-Yam

Weizmann Institute of Science

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J. S. Deng

Liverpool John Moores University

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S. Valenti

University of California

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E. Cappellaro

European Southern Observatory

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