Ryan M. Lau
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Ryan M. Lau.
Science | 2017
Mansi M. Kasliwal; Ehud Nakar; L. P. Singer; David L. Kaplan; David O. Cook; A. Van Sistine; Ryan M. Lau; C. Fremling; O. Gottlieb; Jacob E. Jencson; S. M. Adams; U. Feindt; Kenta Hotokezaka; S. Ghosh; Daniel A. Perley; Po-Chieh Yu; Tsvi Piran; J. R. Allison; G. C. Anupama; A. Balasubramanian; Keith W. Bannister; John Bally; J. Barnes; Sudhanshu Barway; Eric C. Bellm; V. Bhalerao; D. Bhattacharya; N. Blagorodnova; J. S. Bloom; P. R. Brady
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 Observations of a binary neutron star merger at multiple wavelengths can be explained by an off-axis relativistic cocoon model. Merging neutron stars offer an excellent laboratory for simultaneously studying strong-field gravity and matter in extreme environments. We establish the physical association of an electromagnetic counterpart (EM170817) with gravitational waves (GW170817) detected from merging neutron stars. By synthesizing a panchromatic data set, we demonstrate that merging neutron stars are a long-sought production site forging heavy elements by r-process nucleosynthesis. The weak gamma rays seen in EM170817 are dissimilar to classical short gamma-ray bursts with ultrarelativistic jets. Instead, we suggest that breakout of a wide-angle, mildly relativistic cocoon engulfing the jet explains the low-luminosity gamma rays, the high-luminosity ultraviolet-optical-infrared, and the delayed radio and x-ray emission. We posit that all neutron star mergers may lead to a wide-angle cocoon breakout, sometimes accompanied by a successful jet and sometimes by a choked jet.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Mansi M. Kasliwal; John Bally; Frank J. Masci; Ann Marie Cody; Howard E. Bond; Jacob E. Jencson; Samaporn Tinyanont; Yi Cao; Carlos Contreras; Devin Dykhoff; Samuel Amodeo; Lee Armus; Martha L. Boyer; Matteo Cantiello; Robert L. Carlon; Alexander Cass; David O. Cook; David T. Corgan; Joseph Faella; Ori D. Fox; Wayne Green; Robert D. Gehrz; George Helou; E. Y. Hsiao; Joel Johansson; Rubab M. Khan; Ryan M. Lau; N. Langer; Emily M. Levesque; Peter A. Milne
We present an ongoing, five-year systematic search for extragalactic infrared transients, dubbed SPIRITS—SPitzer InfraRed Intensive Transients Survey. In the first year, using Spitzer/IRAC, we searched 190 nearby galaxies with cadence baselines of one month and six months. We discovered over 1958 variables and 43 transients. Here, we describe the survey design and highlight 14 unusual infrared transients with no optical counterparts to deep limits, which we refer to as SPRITEs (eSPecially Red Intermediate-luminosity Transient Events). SPRITEs are in the infrared luminosity gap between novae and supernovae, with [4.5] absolute magnitudes between −11 and −14 (Vega-mag) and [3.6]–[4.5] colors between 0.3 mag and 1.6 mag. The photometric evolution of SPRITEs is diverse, ranging from 7 mag yr^(−1). SPRITEs occur in star-forming galaxies. We present an in-depth study of one of them, SPIRITS 14ajc in Messier 83, which shows shock-excited molecular hydrogen emission. This shock may have been triggered by the dynamic decay of a non-hierarchical system of massive stars that led to either the formation of a binary or a protostellar merger.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Mansi M. Kasliwal; Oleg Korobkin; Ryan M. Lau; Ryan T. Wollaeger; Christopher L. Fryer
We present constraints on Ks-band emission from one of the nearest short hard gamma-ray bursts, GRB 160821B, at z=0.16, at three epochs. We detect a reddened relativistic afterglow from the jetted emission in the first epoch but do not detect any excess kilonova emission in the second two epochs. We compare upper limits obtained with Keck I/MOSFIRE to multi-dimensional radiative transfer models of kilonovae, that employ composition-dependent nuclear heating and LTE opacities of heavy elements. We discuss eight models that combine toroidal dynamical ejecta and two types of wind and one model with dynamical ejecta only. We also discuss simple, empirical scaling laws of predicted emission as a function of ejecta mass and ejecta velocity. Our limits for GRB 160821B constrain the ejecta mass to be lower than 0.03 Msun for velocities greater than 0.1c. At the distance sensitivity range of advanced LIGO, similar ground-based observations would be sufficiently sensitive to the full range of predicted model emission including models with only dynamical ejecta. The color evolution of these models shows that I-K color spans 7--16 mag, which suggests that even relatively shallow infrared searches for kilonovae could be as constraining as optical searches.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Ryan M. Lau; Marianne Heida; Mansi M. Kasliwal; D. J. Walton
We present mid-infrared (IR) light curves of the Ultraluminous X-ray Source (ULX) Holmberg II X-1 from observations taken between 2014 January 13 and 2017 January 5 with the \textit{Spitzer Space Telescope} at 3.6 and 4.5
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Matthew J. Hankins; Ryan M. Lau; Mark R. Morris; Terry L. Herter
\mu
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
J. D. Adams; Terry L. Herter; Ryan M. Lau; C. Trinh; Matthew J. Hankins
m in the \textit{Spitzer} Infrared Intensive Transients Survey (SPIRITS). The mid-IR light curves, which reveal the first detection of mid-IR variability from a ULX, is determined to arise primarily from dust emission rather than from a jet or an accretion disk outflow. We derived the evolution of the dust temperature (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
Jacob E. Jencson; Mansi M. Kasliwal; S. M. Adams; Howard E. Bond; Ryan M. Lau; Joel Johansson; Assaf Horesh; K. Mooley; R. P. Fender; Kishalay De; Dónal O'Sullivan; Frank J. Masci; Ann Marie Cody; N. Blagorodnova; Ori D. Fox; Robert D. Gehrz; Peter A. Milne; Daniel A. Perley; Nathan Smith; Schuyler D. Van Dyk
T_\mathrm{d}\sim600 - 800
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
Stephanie Kwan; Ryan M. Lau; Jacob E. Jencson; Mansi M. Kasliwal; Martha L. Boyer; Eran O. Ofek; Frank J. Masci; Russ R. Laher
K), IR luminosity (
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
Matthew J. Hankins; Terry L. Herter; Matthias Maercker; Ryan M. Lau; Gregory Clayton Sloan
L_\mathrm{IR}\sim3\times10^4
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
D. J. Walton; Matteo Bachetti; Felix Fürst; Didier Barret; M. Brightman; A. C. Fabian; Brian W. Grefenstette; Fiona A. Harrison; M. Heida; J. A. Kennea; P. Kosec; Ryan M. Lau; K. K. Madsen; Matthew J. Middleton; C. Pinto; James F. Steiner; N. Webb